RBI clamps curbs on New India Co-operative Bank, depositors queue up outside branches

Panic-stricken depositors on Friday started queueing up before the branches of Mumbai-based New India Co-operative Bank after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) clamped severe restrictions on the bank in the wake of certain supervisory concerns.

This is the first major action against a co-operative bank in Maharashtra after the collapse of Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative Bank due to large scale fraudulent loans.

The RBI directed the loss-making bank not to grant or renew any loans and advances, make any investment, incur any liability including borrowal of funds and acceptance of fresh deposits, disburse or agree to disburse any payment whether in discharge of its liabilities and obligations without prior approval of RBI in writing. The RBI restrictions which came into effect after the close of business on February 13, will be valid for six months.

The bank has a network of 30 branches and a deposit base of Rs 2,436 crore as of March 2024. The bank had posted losses of Rs 22.78 crore in 2023-24 and Rs 30.74 crore in 2022-23.

According to the RBI, the eligible depositors would be entitled to receive deposit insurance claim amount of their deposits up to a monetary ceiling of Rs 5 lakh from the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC), as applicable under the provisions of the DICGC Act, 1961. It will be based on submission of willingness by the depositors concerned and after due verification, it said.

This means a depositor who has an FD of Rs 10 lakh in the bank will get only Rs 5 lakh as insurance claim amount from the DICGC.

“These directions are necessitated due to supervisory concerns emanating from the recent material developments in the bank, and to protect the interest of depositors of the bank,” the RBI said in its Directions issued on Thursday evening. Most of the bank’s branches are located in Mumbai and Thane areas.

The RBI said the bank cannot enter into any compromise or arrangement and sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of any of its properties or assets except as notified in the RBI Direction dated February 13, 2025.

“Considering the bank’s present liquidity position, the bank has been directed not to allow withdrawal of any amount from savings bank or current accounts or any other account of a depositor,” the RBI said. However, it has allowed to set off loans against deposits subject to the conditions stated in the above RBI directions, it said.

However, the bank may incur expenditure in respect of certain essential items such as salaries of employees, rent and electricity bills as specified in the said directions.

The central bank said the issue of the directions by the RBI should not be construed as cancellation of banking license by RBI. The bank will continue to undertake banking business subject to restrictions specified in the said directions till its financial position improves, it said.

“The RBI continues to monitor the position of the bank and will take necessary actions including modifications of these directions, as warranted, depending upon circumstances and in the interest of the depositors,” it said.

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Stock markets at close: Nifty Smallcap 100 index enters bear phase; tanks 22% from peak

Stock Market LIVE Updates: Technical view

Stock Market LIVE Updates: The Nifty continues to reel under a bear attack, closing below 23,000 after spending a few days floating above this level. Sentiment remains weak, even though the index managed to close 155 points off its low, as it continues to trade below a critical short-term moving average. A decisive fall from 22,800 could trigger further panic in the market. On the higher end, 23,100 appears to be the immediate resistance, above which the market may see some respite.

Stock Market LIVE Updates: Here’s a look at Nifty gainers and loser at close

Stock Market LIVE Updates: Britannia, Nestle India, ICICI Bank were the top gainers on Nifty50. Adani Ports, BEL, Adani Enterprises were among the top losers on the index. 

Stock Market LIVE Updates: Here’s a look at Sensex gainers and loser at close

Stock Market LIVE Updates: Adani Ports, Sun Pharma, UltraTech Cement were among the top losers on Sensex. Conversely, Nestle India, ICICI Bank, Infosys were the top winners. 

Stock Market LIVE Updates: A glance at broader market

Stock Market LIVE Updates: Broader market indices cracked. BSE Midcap was down over 2 per cent and Smallcap was down over 3 per cent. 

Stock Market LIVE Updates: Nifty50 closes at 22,929.25, down 102.15 pts

Stock Market LIVE Updates: National Stock Exchange (NSE) Nifty50 closed at 22,929.25, down 102.15 points or 0.44 per cent. In the day, the index recorded a high at 23,133.7 and low at 22,774.85. 

Stock Market LIVE Updates: Sensex closes 199.76 pts lower at 75,939.21

Stock Market LIVE Updates: BSE Sensex closed at 75,939.21, down 199.76 points or 0.26 per cent. In the day the index made an intraday high of 76,138.97 and day’s low at 75,439.64.

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India’s wholesale inflation eases to 2.31% in January as food prices cool

 India’s wholesale price index-based inflation eased to 2.31% in January from 2.37% in December due to a decline in food prices, especially vegetables, according to the provisional data released by the commerce and industry ministry on Friday.

The fall in WPI-based inflation in January did not surprise experts, as a drop in food prices was expected with the arrival of fresh harvests. A Reuters poll of economists had expected wholesale inflation to rise by around 2.5% in January.

Food prices decline

Food prices, a major contributor to the index, increased by 7.47% in January, easing from 8.89% in December. Vegetable prices rose 8.35% year-on-year, but down from the 28.65% surge in the previous month.

Cereal prices rose 7.33% in January, up from 6.82% in December. The price of pulses rose slightly to 5.08% in January from 5.02% in December.

Food prices have remained elevated for over a year, primarily during November 2023-June 2024 due to uneven and below-normal monsoon rains.

“Correction in food inflation helped in the wholesale inflation edging down to 2.3% in January… This was also helped by a sustained decline in prices of fuel & power (2.8% yoy, now for six straight months),” said Paras Jasrai, senior economic analyst at India Ratings and Research.

“However, the trend was not broad-based as inflation in core, non-food articles (others) and energy & minerals recorded an increase in January 2025. The non-food articles firmed up further to a two-year high of 3.0% in January 2025, while the prices for energy & minerals were up 0.6% YoY after a gap of four months,” he added.

Beyond food prices

Manufactured product prices, which make up around 64% of the wholesale price index, rose 2.51% in January, up from 2.14% in December.

Fuel and power prices fell 2.78% year-on-year against a 3.79% decline in the previous month.

“Inflation in manufactured goods remained subdued in November, rising to 2.5% due to an unfavourable base effect from the previous year. Deflation in the fuel and power sector persisted, continuing the trend observed over the past five months,” said Rajani Sinha, chief economist, CareEdge.

“On the external front, while Brent crude oil prices remain subdued, but inflation in industrial metals entered positive territory in January, exiting six months of deflation. Strong price momentum in certain base metals have contributed to the growth of industrial metal prices,” she added.

Prices of non-food articles rose 2.95% year-on-year in January, from 2.46% year-on-year in December.

Prices of primary articles—which include food articles, non-food articles, minerals, and crude petroleum and natural gas— rose 4.69% in January, after rising 6.02% year-on-year in December.

Taming inflation

Retail inflation, based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI), was at 4.31% in January, down from a 5.22% rise in December and below the 5.48% in November and 5.10% a year ago, according to official data released earlier this week.

Last week, the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) reset its repo rate to 6.25%, the first such easing move since the 2020 covid outbreak.

Regulating interest rates is a key for the central bank to control inflation.

A higher interest rate regime makes borrowing costs more expensive, reducing demand among banks, financial institutions, and the general public, which can, in turn, bring down consumer spending and inflation.

RBI’s medium-term target for CPI inflation is 4% within a band of plus or minus 2%.

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