RBI/2017-18/75 A.P. (DIR Series) Circular No. 08
October 12th, 2017
To All Authorized Dealer Category - I Banks Madam / Sir,
Risk Management and Inter-Bank Dealings – Facilities for Hedging Trade
Exposures invoiced in Indian Rupees
Attention of Authorized Dealers Category – I (AD Category – I) banks is
invited to the Foreign Exchange Management (Foreign Exchange Derivative
Contracts) Regulations, 2000 dated May 3, 2000 (Notification No. FEMA.
25/RB-2000 dated May 3, 2000) and Master Directions on Risk Management and
Inter-Bank Dealings dated July 5, 2016 as amended from time to time.
2.
In terms of para 6 under Section II (Facilities for Persons Residents outside
India) of the aforementioned master direction, non-residents are permitted to
hedge the currency risk arising out of INR invoiced exports from and imports to
India with AD Category I banks in India. On a review of this facility, it has
been decided to permit the central treasury (of the group and being a group
entity) of such non-residents to undertake hedges for and behalf of such
non-residents with AD Category I banks in India as per the existing Model I and
Model II. The revised operational guidelines, terms and conditions are placed at
Annex to this circular.
3. The directions contained in this circular have
been issued under Sections 10 (4) and 11(1) of the Foreign Exchange Management
Act, 1999 (42 of 1999) and is without prejudice to permissions / approvals, if
any, required under any other law.
Yours faithfully, (T Rabi Sankar) Chief General Manager
Annex
Facilities for Hedging Trade Exposures, invoiced in Indian
Rupees in India Purpose
To hedge the currency risk arising out of
genuine trade transactions involving exports from and imports to India, invoiced
in Indian Rupees, with AD Category I banks in India.
Products
Forward foreign exchange contracts with rupee as one of the currencies, foreign
currency-INR options.
Operational Guidelines, Terms and Conditions
The AD Category I banks can opt for either Model I or Model II as given
below:
Model I
Non-resident exporter / importer or its central
treasury (of the group and being a group entity) dealing through their overseas
bank (including overseas branches of AD banks in India)
i. Non-resident
exporter / importer, or its central treasury approaches his banker overseas with
appropriate documents with a request for hedging their Rupee exposure arising
out of a confirmed import or export order invoiced in Rupees.
ii. The
overseas bank in turn approaches its correspondent in India (i.e. the AD bank in
India) for a price to hedge the exposure of its customer along with
documentation furnished by the customer that will enable the AD bank in India to
satisfy itself that there is an underlying trade transaction (scanned copies
would be acceptable). The following undertakings also need to be taken from the
customer:
That the same underlying exposure has not been hedged with any
other AD Category I bank/s in India
If the underlying exposure is
cancelled, the customer will cancel the hedge contract immediately
In
case of a central treasury, an authorization from the entity having INR exposure
to hedge on its behalf
iii. A certification on the end client KYC may
also be taken as a one-time document from the overseas bank by the AD bank in
India.
iv. The AD bank in India based on documents received from the
overseas correspondent should satisfy itself about the existence of the
underlying trade transaction and offer a forward price (no two-way quotes should
be given) to the overseas bank who, in turn, will offer the same to its
customer. The AD bank, therefore, will ‘not be’ dealing directly with the
overseas importer / exporter.
v. The amount and tenor of the hedge should
not exceed that of the underlying transaction and should be in consonance with
the extant regulations regarding tenor of payment / realization of the proceeds.
vi. On due date, settlement is to be done through the correspondent bank’s
Vostro or the AD bank’s Nostro accounts. vii. The contracts, once cancelled,
cannot be rebooked.
viii. The contracts may, however, be rolled over on
or before maturity subject to maturity of the underlying exposure.
ix. On
cancellation of the contracts, gains may be passed on to the customer subject to
the customer providing a declaration that he is not going to rebook the contract
or that the contract has been cancelled on account of cancellation of the
underlying exposure.
x. In case the underlying trade transaction is
extended, rollover can be permitted once based on the extension of the
underlying trade transaction for which suitable documentation is to be provided
by the overseas bank and the same procedure followed as in case of the original
contract.
Model II
Non-resident exporter / importer or its central
treasury (of the group and being a group entity) dealing directly with the AD
bank in India
i. The overseas exporter / importer or its central treasury
approaches the AD bank in India with a request for forward cover in respect of
underlying transaction for which he furnishes appropriate documentation (scanned
copies would be acceptable), on a pre-deal basis to enable the AD bank in India
to satisfy itself that there is an underlying trade transaction, and details of
his overseas banker, address etc. The following undertakings also need to be
taken from the customer
That the same underlying exposure has not been
hedged with any other AD Category I bank/s in India.
If the underlying
exposure is cancelled, the customer will cancel the hedge contract immediately.
In case of a central treasury, an authorization from the entity having INR
exposure to hedge on its behalf
ii. The AD bank may obtain certification
of KYC/AML in the format in Annex XVIII. The format can be obtained through the
overseas correspondent / bank through SWIFT authenticated message. In case the
AD bank has a presence outside India, the AD may take care of the KYC/AML
through its bank’s offshore branch.
iii. AD banks should evolve
appropriate arrangements to mitigate credit risk. Credit limits can be granted
based on the credit analysis done by self / the overseas branch.
iv. The
amount and tenor of the hedge should not exceed that of the underlying
transaction and should be in consonance with the extant regulations regarding
tenor of payment / realization of the proceeds.
v. On due date,
settlement is to be done through the correspondent bank’s Vostro or the AD
bank’s Nostro accounts. AD banks in India may release funds to the beneficiaries
only after sighting funds in Nostro / Vostro accounts.
vi. The contracts,
once cancelled, cannot be rebooked.
vii. The contracts may, however, be
rolled over on or before maturity subject to maturity of the underlying
exposure.
viii. On cancellation of the contracts, gains may be passed on
to the customer subject to the customer providing a declaration that he is not
going to rebook the contract or that the contract has been cancelled on account
of cancellation of the underlying exposure.
ix. In case the underlying
trade transaction is extended, rollover can be permitted once based on the
extension of the underlying trade transaction for which suitable documentation
is to be provided by the overseas bank and the same procedure followed as in
case of the original contract.
x. AD banks shall report hedge contracts
booked under this facility to CCIL’s trade repository with a special
identification tag.
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