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Relevance: GS-III (Indian Economy, Banking & Forex) Source: RBI / Business Standard, June 2026

1 · The Core Issue

Right now, foreign investors are pulling a lot of money out of the Indian stock market, causing the value of the Rupee to drop. To stop this, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) launched a massive plan in June 2026 to attract dollars from Non-Resident Indians (NRIs).

The RBI announced a special “swap window” and gave banks new powers to offer highly attractive loans backed by NRI deposits. Experts predict this smart move could bring in up to $50 billion in fresh foreign cash.

2 · How the Plan Works

NRIs often save their money in India using an FCNR(B) account. The beauty of this account is that the money is kept in foreign currencies (like US Dollars), so the NRI doesn’t worry about the Rupee losing value. However, Indian banks have to pay high “insurance” costs (called hedging) to protect themselves when they convert those dollars to rupees for local lending. Here is how the RBI just changed the game:

The Swap Window
Discounted Exchanges
Between June and September 2026, banks can swap new 3-5 year NRI deposits directly with the RBI at a much cheaper rate than normal.
The Mechanism
RBI Takes the Burden
The RBI is absorbing the expensive “insurance” (hedging) costs. Because banks save money here, they are now offering NRIs huge interest rates of 6–7%+ to deposit their dollars.
New Lending Powers
Massive Leverage
Banks can now give massive loans (up to 9 times the deposit amount) backed by these accounts. Because of this, NRIs can effectively earn massive returns of 15–27%.
The Macro Stake
Defending the Rupee
These new dollars will rebuild India’s Forex reserves and stop the Rupee from crashing. The only risk? If the Rupee drops significantly, the RBI will take a financial hit.

  • Matching timelines: If these funds are used for foreign loans (ECBs), the loan repayment timeline must perfectly match the deposit’s maturity (capped at 5 years).
  • Regular accounts continue: Banks can still offer normal 3-5 year FCNR(B) deposits without participating in this special RBI window, provided they keep the accounting separate.
  • A bigger picture: This is part of the new 2026 Borrowing and Lending Rules, which streamlined how India handles foreign commercial loans, raising borrowing limits up to $1 billion.

UPSC Revision Box
FCNR(B) Account An NRI account held in foreign currencies (like USD). The NRI does not lose money if the Rupee’s value falls.
NRE Account An NRI account held in Indian Rupees. The NRI bears the risk of the currency’s value changing.
Hedging Buying a financial “insurance” contract to protect against a sudden drop in currency prices.
Currency Swap An agreement to exchange one currency for another at a fixed rate today, and swap it back later.
SBLC Standby Letter of Credit. A bank guarantee promising to pay if the borrower defaults.
Lien A bank’s legal right to freeze an asset (like a deposit) until a related loan is paid off.
ECB External Commercial Borrowing. When Indian companies borrow money from foreign lenders.
2026 Lending Regulations New rules combining India’s foreign borrowing laws, raising the loan cap to $1 billion.

Test Your Knowledge
Q. With reference to NRI deposit accounts and the RBI’s recent policies, consider the following statements:

  1. NRE (Non-Resident External) accounts are kept in foreign currencies, while FCNR(B) accounts are kept in Indian Rupees.
  2. Under the June 2026 swap window, the RBI absorbs the hedging costs, allowing banks to offer much higher interest rates to NRIs.
  3. The Foreign Exchange Management (Borrowing and Lending) (First Amendment) Regulations, 2026 consolidated India’s rules for External Commercial Borrowings.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only    (b) 2 and 3 only    (c) 1 and 3 only    (d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: (b) 2 and 3 only

  • Statement 1 — Incorrect: This is a classic UPSC trap! NRE accounts are kept in Indian Rupees, meaning the NRI takes the risk of the Rupee dropping. FCNR(B) accounts are kept in Foreign Currencies (FC), keeping the NRI safe from exchange rate drops.
  • Statement 2 — Correct: Because the RBI takes on the expensive hedging costs, banks save money. They pass these savings to NRIs by offering high 6-7%+ interest rates to attract more dollars.
  • Statement 3 — Correct: The 2026 regulations successfully streamlined and combined all of India’s rules regarding how companies can borrow money from abroad (ECBs).

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