RBI released New Circular on Liquidity Guidelines Under Basel III, Know About New LCR Rules from 1st April 2026

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RBI released New Circular on Liquidity Guidelines Under Basel III: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has released a new circular announcing important changes to its Basel III liquidity framework, specifically targeting the Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR). These changes are aimed at strengthening the liquidity position of banks while aligning India’s regulatory framework with international standards. The updated guidelines will come into effect from April 1, 2026, and apply to all commercial banks, except Payments Banks, Regional Rural Banks (RRBs), and Local Area Banks (LABs).

What is the Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR)?

LCR is a rule under Basel III guidelines that ensures banks have enough High-Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA) to survive a 30-day period of financial stress. These assets must be easily sellable and of high credit quality.

Key Changes Made by RBI

1. Higher Run-Off Rate for Deposits with Digital Banking Access

Why this is needed? Customers with digital access can withdraw money quickly during uncertain times, so banks need to be better prepared.

2. Small Business Customers Treated Like Retail Customers

This is needed as many small businesses behave like individual retail customers in terms of deposit patterns.

3. New Valuation Rule for Government Securities

This change ensures the value of these securities is realistic and matches market conditions.

4. Treatment of Pledged Fixed Deposits

Why this change? If the deposit is pledged, there’s a possibility it could be used, so it must be factored into liquidity calculations.

5. Updated Rules for Deposits from Legal Entities

Earlier, deposits from entities like HUFs, trusts, partnerships, AoPs, etc., were treated as unsecured wholesale funding from “Other Legal Entities (OLEs)”, and had a 100% run-off rate, unless they qualified as Small Business Customers (SBCs).

New Rules:

Impact of the Changes

These updates are designed to:

New Rules Released by RBI

ChangeOld RuleNew Rule
Digital-access retail deposits5% (stable), 10% (less stable)7.5% (stable), 12.5% (less stable)
Small business customer depositsTreated separatelyTreated like retail
Valuation of Govt. securitiesAs per previous circularMust follow market value + LAF/MSF haircuts
Pledged fixed depositsExcluded from LCRIncluded in LCR
Deposits from HUFs/trusts/etc.100% run-off as OLEs40% run-off as non-financial corporates

The RBI’s updated guidelines under the Basel III LCR framework are a step forward in modernizing India’s banking system. By recognizing new banking behaviors like digital withdrawals and better categorizing funding sources, the RBI is helping banks stay better prepared for liquidity shocks — all while keeping the transition smooth and well-aligned with international practices.

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