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  2. Reserve Bank of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reserve_Bank_of_India

    The Reserve Bank of India, abbreviated as RBI, is India's central bank and regulatory body responsible for regulation of the Indian banking system. Owned by the Ministry of Finance, Government of India, it is responsible for the control, issue and maintaining supply of the Indian rupee. It also manages the country's main payment systems and ...

  3. Repurchase agreement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repurchase_agreement

    The rate at which the RBI lends to commercial banks is called the repo rate. In case of inflation, the RBI may increase the repo rate, thus discouraging banks to borrow and reducing the money supply in the economy. [17] As of September 2020, the RBI repo rate is set at 4.00% and the reverse repo rate at 3.35%. [18]

  4. Monetary policy of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monetary_policy_of_India

    The Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 (RBI Act) was amended by the Finance Act, 2016, to provide a statutory and institutionalised framework for a Monetary Policy Committee, for maintaining price stability, while keeping in mind the objective of growth. The Monetary Policy Committee is entrusted with the task of fixing the benchmark policy rate ...

  5. Liquidity adjustment facility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquidity_adjustment_facility

    The rate charged by Reserve bank of India for this transaction is called the repo rate. Repo operations, therefore, inject liquidity into the system. Reverse repo operation is when RBI borrows money from banks by lending securities. The interest rate paid by RBI in this case is called the reverse repo rate.

  6. Stocks and dollar gain as Fed charts 'soft landing' path

    www.aol.com/news/stocks-dollar-gain-fed-charts...

    The dollar bounced, long-dated bond yields were up and Asian stocks mostly rose after the U.S. Federal Reserve began its easing cycle with a large rate cut, though it tempered that with a balanced ...

  7. MIBOR (Indian reference rate) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIBOR_(Indian_reference_rate)

    MIBOR ( Mumbai Inter-Bank Offer Rate) is the overnight interest rate or reference rate based on the averaged interest rates at which Indian banks borrow unsecured funds from counterparties in the Indian rupee wholesale money market (or interbank market ). [ 1] The rate was originally published by the Fixed Income Money Market and Derivative ...

  8. Money supply - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_supply

    The Reserve Bank of India defines the monetary aggregates as: [45] Reserve money (M0): Currency in circulation, plus bankers' deposits with the RBI and 'other' deposits with the RBI. Calculated from net RBI credit to the government plus RBI credit to the commercial sector, plus RBI's claims on banks and net foreign assets plus the government's ...

  9. Foreign-exchange reserves of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign-exchange_reserves...

    The foreign exchange reserves of India are holdings of cash, bank deposits, bonds, and other financial assets denominated in currencies other than India's national currency, the Indian rupee. The foreign-exchange reserves are managed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for the Indian government, and the main component is foreign currency assets.