3 min readMumbaiJul 15, 2026 01:20 AM IST
The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) special FCNR(B) deposit mobilisation scheme has helped banks garner close to $10 billion so far, but the pace of inflows has somewhat moderated after an initial surge. While collections had accelerated after the RBI clarified that banks could extend loans against FCNR(B) deposits, the momentum, which has since eased as rising funding costs have made further mobilisation less attractive, is expected to pick up in the coming months, banking officials said.
Several obstacles have come up even as banks tried to increase deposits from overseas Indians. The most significant challenge is the 25–40 basis point increase in the cost of raising dollar funds and rise in bond yields in the US and Europe amid the continuing West Asia conflict following the RBI’s June 23 clarification, which enabled leveraged deposit formats. “There’s doubt whether the estimated $ 50-70 billion flow will materialise in the wake of tight conditions but flows will pick up when funding cost and bond yields come down,” said a banking source.
On Tuesday, the rupee, which had recovered to the 94 level against the dollar after the RBI introduced the new FCNR scheme, fell by 58 paise to 96.20. Dilip Parmar, Senior Research Analyst, HDFC Securities, said the Indian rupee underperformed against its Asian peers, tumbling to its weakest level in a month on Tuesday. Surging crude oil prices—driven by escalating geopolitical tensions—heavily weighed on the local currency. “Additionally, rising global bond yields may dampen expected inflows into the FCNR(B) scheme, piling further pressure on the rupee,” he said.
On Monday, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman interacted with MDs and CEOs of banks and asked them for enhanced NRI outreach to sustain the mobilisation momentum.
Banks are facing external funding pressures, including high bond yields and interest rates abroad, that are increasing the cost and complexity of raising foreign currency resources, they said.
On June 5, the RBI announced the special dispensation that allows banks to mobilise fresh three- to five-year FCNR(B) deposits until September 2026. It also permitted them to swap these deposits with the RBI at a concessional rate, effectively covering the entire hedging cost.
By absorbing the hedging burden, the RBI has made FCNR(B) deposits a more attractive source of overseas funding for lenders. Experts then said the steps announced may attract an additional $50 billion to $70 billion in foreign capital into Indian markets, provided the banks offer the right interest rates after considering the hedging sops.




