Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) — FCNR(B) Deposits
Source: Mint
Summary
The Central Government will nudge commercial banks to step up deposit mobilisation through the Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) — FCNR(B) — route, after the RBI said it would bear the full hedging cost on fresh 3- to 5-year FCNR(B) deposits till 30 September 2026. Industry estimates suggest banks could raise up to USD 40 billion through this route; PNB’s MD pegs overall inflows at USD 50–60 billion alongside a concessional FX swap facility for PSUs. Banks will reach out to NRI/OCI customers via local and overseas branches “in mission mode.”
Key takeaways:
- RBI move: Absorbs the full hedging cost (~3%) on fresh 3–5 year FCNR(B) deposits till 30 Sept 2026.
- Estimates: Up to USD 40 billion via FCNR(B); USD 50–60 billion overall with the PSU swap facility.
- Why now: Rupee under pressure (FPI outflows, oil, West Asia conflict); FCNR(B) inflows collapsed in FY26 (~USD 946 mn vs ~USD 7 bn in FY25).
- 2013 echo: A rerun of the taper-tantrum swap window that raised ~USD 30 billion.
- Nature: A non-debt-creating flow that does not raise external sovereign debt.
- NRI draw: Interest is tax-free in India and carries no rupee-depreciation risk to the depositor.
Background & Concept
What is happening? To stabilise the rupee and rebuild reserves, the RBI is subsidising banks’ currency-hedging cost so they can offer attractive FCNR(B) rates to NRIs while staying profitable. Banks raising dollar deposits must hedge: they receive dollars now, deploy funds in rupees, and must repay dollars in 3–5 years. Hedging that risk (~3%) normally erodes the bank’s spread (NIM); by bearing this cost, the RBI removes the disincentive.
Why it matters: FCNR(B) inflows are non-debt-creating in the sense that they do not add to external sovereign borrowing, and the depositor — not the bank’s customer base in rupees — bears no rupee risk. When dollars flow in, forex reserves rise, dollar supply increases, and the rupee tends to strengthen, giving the RBI more room to intervene. The strategy mirrors 2013, when a similar swap window raised about USD 30 billion during the taper tantrum.
Key Facts
| Indicator | Detail |
|---|---|
| Instrument | FCNR(B) — Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) deposit |
| RBI measure | Bears full hedging cost on fresh 3–5 yr deposits |
| Window valid till | 30 September 2026 |
| Industry estimate | Up to USD 40 billion via FCNR(B) |
| Overall (with PSU swap) | USD 50–60 billion (per PNB MD) |
| FY26 mobilisation | ~USD 946 million |
| FY25 mobilisation | ~USD 7 billion |
| 2013 parallel | ~USD 30 billion (taper tantrum) |
| Nature | Bank-level liability; non-debt-creating; no sovereign debt added |
FCNR(B) at a Glance
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Type | Term/fixed deposit held in India, maintained in foreign currency |
| Who can open | NRIs, PIOs, OCIs |
| Liability | Bank-level (not sovereign borrowing) |
| Maturity | Minimum 1 year, maximum 5 years (swap window: 3–5 years) |
| Tax | Interest tax-free in India for the depositor |
| Currency risk | Borne by the bank, not the depositor |
| Currencies | USD, GBP, EUR, JPY, AUD, CAD, and others permitted by the RBI |
How an FCNR(B) Inflow Helps the Rupee
| Step | Effect |
|---|---|
| NRIs deposit dollars | Dollars flow into India |
| Reserves rise | Forex reserves are boosted |
| Dollar supply up | Tends to strengthen the rupee against the dollar |
| RBI firepower | More ammunition to intervene in the forex market |
Keywords & Definitions
▸ FCNR(B) Account: A term deposit in India held by NRIs/OCIs in foreign currencies, with no rupee-depreciation risk to the depositor.
▸ NRI: An Indian citizen residing abroad for tax/stay-related reasons.
▸ OCI: A foreign citizen of Indian origin granted a lifelong visa and certain rights in India (excluding voting).
▸ Hedging Cost: Cost of protecting against currency-rate movements, typically via swaps and forwards (~3% here).
▸ Forex Swap: A contract to exchange currencies now and reverse the deal later at a pre-agreed rate, used to manage currency risk.
▸ Net Interest Margin (NIM): Difference between a bank’s interest income and interest expense, as a % of interest-earning assets.
▸ Forex Reserves: A country’s stock of foreign currency, gold, IMF reserve position, and SDRs, held by the central bank.
▸ CRR (Cash Reserve Ratio): Share of deposits banks must keep with the RBI in cash — currently 3.0%.
▸ SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio): Share of deposits banks must hold in government securities and approved instruments — currently 18.0%.
▸ ECBs (External Commercial Borrowings): Foreign-currency loans raised by Indian entities (including PSUs) from foreign lenders, subject to RBI rules.
Question Section (MCQs)
Q1. Consider the following statements about an FCNR(B) account:
- It is a term deposit maintained in foreign currency in India.
- It can be opened by NRIs, PIOs, and OCIs.
- It is a sovereign borrowing of the Government of India. Which are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Q2. The interest earned on an FCNR(B) deposit is: (a) Taxed at 30% in India (b) Tax-free in India for the NRI/OCI depositor (c) Subject to TDS at 10% (d) Taxed only if the maturity exceeds 3 years
Q3. The permissible maturity range for an FCNR(B) deposit is: (a) 6 months to 3 years (b) 1 year to 5 years (c) 2 years to 7 years (d) 3 years to 10 years
Q4. Why is the RBI bearing the hedging cost on fresh FCNR(B) deposits?
- Banks face currency risk as they repay in dollars but deploy funds in rupees.
- The hedging cost (~3%) erodes the bank’s spread.
- Absorbing the cost lets banks offer attractive rates to NRIs while staying profitable. (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Q5. How does an FCNR(B) inflow help the rupee? Consider:
- It boosts India’s forex reserves.
- It increases dollar supply, tending to strengthen the rupee.
- It gives the RBI more room to intervene in the forex market. Which are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Q6. The current FCNR(B) push is described as a rerun of which earlier episode? (a) The 1991 Balance of Payments crisis (b) The 2008 Global Financial Crisis (c) The 2013 taper tantrum, which raised about USD 30 billion (d) Demonetisation 2016
Q7. Match the ratio with its current value as cited: A. CRR — 1. 18.0% B. SLR — 2. 3.0% (a) A-1, B-2 (b) A-2, B-1 (c) Both 3.0% (d) Both 18.0%
Q8. Which of the following currencies are permitted for FCNR(B) deposits?
- USD 2. GBP 3. EUR 4. JPY (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 1, 2 and 3 only (c) 2, 3 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Q9. Consider the following statements about FCNR(B) mobilisation:
- It collapsed in FY26 to about USD 946 million.
- In FY25, banks had raised about USD 7 billion.
- It is a non-debt-creating flow that does not raise external sovereign debt. Which are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Q10. A “Forex Swap,” as used by banks to manage currency risk, is best described as: (a) Borrowing dollars from the IMF (b) A contract to exchange currencies now and reverse the deal later at a pre-agreed rate (c) Selling government securities to the RBI (d) Converting an FCNR(B) deposit into a rupee deposit
Answer Key with Explanations
▸ Q1 → (a) 1 and 2 only. An FCNR(B) is a foreign-currency term deposit opened by NRIs/PIOs/OCIs. Statement 3 is wrong — it is a bank-level liability, not sovereign borrowing.
▸ Q2 → (b) Tax-free in India. Tax-free interest is one of its biggest attractions for NRIs.
▸ Q3 → (b) 1 year to 5 years. Minimum 1 year, maximum 5 years; the RBI swap window targets the 3–5 year segment.
▸ Q4 → (d) 1, 2 and 3. All three apply — banks face currency risk, the ~3% hedging cost erodes spread, and RBI absorption lets banks price attractively while staying profitable.
▸ Q5 → (d) 1, 2 and 3. Inflows boost reserves, raise dollar supply (strengthening the rupee), and expand the RBI’s intervention capacity.
▸ Q6 → (c) It mirrors the 2013 taper-tantrum swap window, which raised about USD 30 billion.
▸ Q7 → (b) A-2, B-1. As cited, CRR is 3.0% and SLR is 18.0%.
▸ Q8 → (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4. USD, GBP, EUR, and JPY are all permitted (along with AUD, CAD, and others the RBI allows).
▸ Q9 → (d) 1, 2 and 3. FY26 mobilisation fell to ~USD 946 mn (vs ~USD 7 bn in FY25), and the flow is non-debt-creating, not adding to external sovereign debt.
▸ Q10 → (b) A forex swap exchanges currencies now and reverses the deal later at a pre-agreed rate, hedging currency risk.