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Mumbai:
The government will review the ceiling on intervention bonds if the Reserve Bank
asks for it, finance minister P Chidambaram said. The
ceiling on issue of Market Stabilisation Scheme (MSS) bonds, which the RBI can
use to mop up funds released by its intervention to cap the rupee, is Rs150,000
crore ($37.7 billion) and analysts say the ceiling would have to be rised by at
least a third if the rupee''s rise was to be checked. "If
there is a request from the Reserve Bank of India, we will certainly review it,"
Chidambaram said. A
finance ministry official, who did not wish to be named, said the MSS ceiling
would be reviewed this week. Analysts
said auctions of Rs12,000 crore of MSS bonds and bills on Wednesday would lift
outstanding issues above the Rs135,000 crore level that triggers a review of the
ceiling. The
rupee has risen 2 per cent since a cut in US interest rates on September 18 boosted
demand for emerging market assets. It hit a nine-year high of 39.62 per dollar
last week. India''s
stock market has hit a record high every day since the US rate cut, fuelled in
part by foreign investment. In the last eight days of September, foreign funds
bought a net $3.6 billion of Indian stocks. These
inflows put pressure on the rupee to rise, which the RBI tries to counter by buying
dollars. It bought $38.1 billion in the first seven months of 2007, and it was
spotted intervening again today.
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