Present RBI Rates :
| S. No | Rates / Reserve Ratios | % | W.e.f |
| 1 | Bank Rate | 9.50 % | 20th September 2013 |
| 2 | Repo Rate | 7.5 % | 20th September 2013 |
| 3 | Reverse Repo Rate | 6.50% | 20th September 2013 |
| 4 | Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) | 4.00% | 9th February 2013 |
| 5 | Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) | 23% | 11th August 2012 |
| 6 | Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) | 9.50% | 20th September 2013 |
Bank Rate
Bank rate, also referred to as the discount rate, is the rate of interest which a central bank charges on the loans and advances that it extends to commercial banks and other financial intermediaries. Changes in the bank rate are often used by central banks to control the money supply.
Repo Rate
Reverse Repo Rate
This is exact opposite of Repo rate. Reverse Repo rate is the rate at
which Reserve Bank of India (RBI) borrows money from banks. RBI uses
this tool when it feels there is too much money floating in the banking
system. Banks are always happy to lend money to RBI since their money is
in safe hands with a good interest. An increase in Reverse repo rate
can cause the banks to transfer more funds to RBI due to this attractive
interest rates.
CRR
Cash reserve Ratio (CRR) is the amount of
funds that the banks have to keep with RBI. If RBI decides to increase
the percent of this, the available amount with the banks comes down. RBI
is using this method (increase of CRR rate), to drain out the excessive
money from the banks.
SLR
SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio) is the amount a commercial bank needs
to maintain in the form of cash, or gold or govt. approved securities
(Bonds) before providing credit to its customers. SLR rate is determined
and maintained by the RBI (Reserve Bank of India) in order to control
the expansion of bank credit. SLR is determined as the percentage of
total demand and percentage of time liabilities. Time Liabilities are
the liabilities a commercial bank liable to pay to the customers on
their anytime demand. SLR is used to control inflation and propel
growth. Through SLR rate tuning the money supply in the system can be
controlled efficiently.
Marginal Standing Facility (MSF)
Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) is the rate at which scheduled banks
could borrow funds overnight from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
against approved government securities. The basic difference between
Repo and MSF scheme is that in MSF banks can use the securities under SLR to get loans from RBI and hence MSF rate is 1% more than repo rate.
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