Stop inviting bids from banks to park surplus cash: Chidambaram.  






- Kamal Narang 
 
Money matters: (From left) Mr R.S.P. Sinha, Chairman and Managing Director of 
MTNL; Dr U.D. Choubey, Chairman and Managing Director, GAIL; Mr R.S. Sharma, 
Chairman and Managing Director, ONGC; and Mr S.K. Roongta, Chairman of SAIL, 
during a meeting with the Finance Minister, Mr P. Chidambaram, in the Capital 
on Tuesday. 

Our Bureau 


New Delhi, Nov. 11 The Finance Minister, Mr P. Chidambaram, is understood to 
have once again told cash rich central public sector enterprises (CPSEs) to 
stop inviting bids from banks for parking their surplus funds. 

Some of them have been seeking higher rates instead of the card rates. The 
Minister has asked them to stop this practice and stick only to card rates. 
This was stated by a Finance Ministry official here on Tuesday. The Finance 
Ministry had in January issued instructions to discontinue the practice of 
inviting competitive bids for bulk deposits. The purpose was to stop 
undesirable competition among banks to prevent arbitrary hikes in deposit 
rates. It was felt that banks were unable to reduce the lending rates due to 
the higher average cost of funds mobilised by them through the process of 
bidding.

Mr Chidambaram had in August said that CPSEs appear to be violating government 
departmental guidelines on placement of funds with banks.

At today's meeting with the chief executives of CPSEs, Mr Chidambaram is also 
understood to have sought CPSEs compliance with the Ministry's directive 
requiring them to park at least 60 per cent of their surplus cash with public 
sector banks. 

"The Minister reiterated the Government's instructions that 60 per cent be kept 
with PSU banks and no bids to be invited. He again sought full compliance with 
those instructions," a CPSE official who attended the meeting said. 

The Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) Chairman, Mr R.S. Sharma, said that 
the state-run oil producer would lose between Rs 300 crore and Rs 400 crore 
each year if competitive bids were not invited and only card rates were 
adopted. 

ONGC has about Rs 23,000 crore of cash surplus, 60 per cent of which would now 
necessarily have to be deposited with public sector and state-run banks. ONGC 
and NTPC are among the blue chip CPSEs that were earlier inviting bids for 
parking surplus funds. 

"Most banks don't even have a published card rate. We were told that we should 
not look at a few billion rupees in national interest. The Government is doing 
everything it can to tackle the current economic turmoil," Mr Sharma told 
reporters after the meeting.

The meeting was attended, among others, by the GAIL Chairman, Mr U.D. Choubey; 
the SAIL Chairman, Mr S.K. Roongta, and senior officials of the petroleum, 
power and finance ministries

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2008/11/12/stories/2008111252480100.htm
When prosperity comes, do not use all of it. 








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