Concepts

Marginal Standing Facility

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectEconomy

Definition

An overnight window through which banks can borrow emergency funds from the Reserve Bank of India at a penal rate above the repo rate, by dipping into their statutory liquidity reserves.

Key points

  • Introduced in 2011 as the upper bound of the interest-rate corridor; banks use it when interbank funds dry up.
  • The MSF rate is set at a fixed margin above the concept repo rate (commonly 25 basis points above); verify the latest spread.
  • Banks may borrow against eligible government securities, including a slice of their SLR holdings, up to a notified percentage of net demand and time liabilities.
  • It forms the ceiling of the LAF corridor, while the Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) forms the floor; the repo rate sits in the middle.
  • A higher-cost backstop, so reliance on the MSF signals tight liquidity in the system.

Why it matters for CAPF

The corridor structure (MSF as ceiling, SDF as floor, repo in the middle) and the "above repo" relationship are standard money-market facts.

Common confusion

MSF (banks borrow from the RBI overnight, penal rate) versus the lender of last resort role; MSF is a routine standing facility, not a bailout. The MSF rate is above the repo rate, not below.

One-line recall

Overnight emergency borrowing from the RBI at a rate just above the repo rate; ceiling of the LAF corridor.

Parent note

money and banking and the rbi

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