The Reserve Bank of India introduced two special USD-Rupee forex swap facilities on June 12, 2026, aimed at bolstering foreign currency inflows and supporting external financing. These measures provide commercial banks and public sector entities with a cost-effective mechanism to hedge currency risks while helping the central bank build a robust line of defense for the Indian Rupee. By incentivizing long-term foreign borrowings and deposits, the RBI seeks to stabilize the domestic currency amidst global financial volatility.
Two Special Swap Facilities: An Overview
A foreign exchange (forex) swap is a financial contract where two parties exchange one currency for another and agree to reverse the transaction at a later date at a specific rate. In the current arrangement, Authorised Dealer (AD) Category-I banks will sell US Dollars to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) at the current market rate. Simultaneously, they enter into a forward contract to buy back the same amount of dollars at a future date.
The RBI, which was established in 1935 and is headquartered in Mumbai, has designed these facilities to target two specific channels of foreign capital. The first facility focuses on attracting deposits from Non-Resident Indians (NRIs), while the second aims to facilitate long-term foreign borrowings by Indian companies and banks. By acting as the counterparty in these swaps, the RBI effectively takes on the exchange rate risk, making it significantly cheaper for banks and corporations to bring foreign capital into the country.
Strengthening Rupee Reserves: The FCNR(B) Swap Facility
The first facility is specifically aimed at Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) or FCNR(B) deposits. These are fixed deposits maintained in India by NRIs in foreign currencies such as the US Dollar, Euro, or British Pound. Under this window, banks can swap the dollars raised from fresh FCNR(B) deposits with the RBI.
Analogy · The Currency Insurance Expand analogy
Think of the RBI swap as an insurance policy for banks. Normally, if a bank takes a dollar deposit and the Rupee weakens, it becomes very expensive for the bank to buy back those dollars later to pay the depositor. With this swap, the RBI tells the bank, “Give me your dollars now at today’s rate, and I promise to give them back to you years later at the same rate, no matter how much the Rupee falls.” This removes the fear of currency loss for the bank.
Key Features and Eligibility
The RBI is offering this swap at par, meaning the buyback rate at maturity will be the same as the initial selling rate. This effectively reduces the hedging cost for banks to zero.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Eligible Deposits | Fresh FCNR(B) deposits with a tenor of 3 to 5 years |
| Mobilization Period | Deposits raised between June 8, 2026, and September 30, 2026 |
| Swap Window | Available until October 16, 2026 |
| Reference Rate | Based on FBIL (Financial Benchmarks India Ltd) reference rates |
| Lock-in Period | Mandatory one-year lock-in for the underlying deposits |
By eliminating hedging costs, the RBI enables banks to offer much higher interest rates to NRIs. This makes Indian deposits more attractive compared to other global investment options, leading to a surge in dollar inflows.
Boosting External Financing: The ECB and OFCB Swap Facility
The second facility targets External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs) and Overseas Foreign Currency Borrowings (OFCBs). ECBs are loans raised by Indian business entities from non-resident lenders, while OFCBs refer to foreign currency loans raised by Indian banks from international markets.
This window is primarily designed for Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) and statutory corporations to ensure that critical sectors like infrastructure and energy have access to stable, low-cost foreign funding. By providing a fixed-cost hedging mechanism, the RBI protects these entities from the volatility of the global currency markets.
Concessional Pricing and Terms
Unlike the FCNR(B) facility which is “at par,” this facility involves a small concessional premium.
- For ECBs: Eligible entities include PSUs and statutory bodies raising funds with an average maturity of 3 years or more.
- For OFCBs: AD Category-I banks can swap borrowings with a minimum maturity of 3 years.
- Pricing: The swap is conducted at a fixed rate of 1.5% per annum, compounded semi-annually. This is significantly lower than the market-linked hedging costs, which can often exceed 5% to 6% during periods of volatility.
- Timeline: This window is open for inflows received between June 8, 2026, and December 31, 2026, with the swap window closing on January 15, 2027.
This facility encourages Indian corporates to tap into global credit markets without the fear that a sudden depreciation of the Rupee will blow up their repayment costs.
Strategic Significance: A “Line of Defense” for the Rupee
The primary objective behind these measures is to create a “line of defense” for the Indian Rupee, which has faced significant pressure due to global macroeconomic shifts and high US interest rates. By opening these windows, the RBI is effectively inviting global capital to park in India in exchange for safety and guaranteed returns.
Market analysts estimate that these two facilities could attract between $40 billion and $70 billion in foreign capital over the next few months. This massive inflow of dollars serves multiple purposes:
- Boosting Forex Reserves: The dollars sold by banks directly enter India’s official foreign exchange reserves, providing a buffer against future shocks.
- Stabilizing the Rupee: As dollar supply increases, the downward pressure on the Rupee eases, preventing a runaway depreciation.
- Managing Liquidity: When banks sell dollars to the RBI, they receive Rupees in exchange. This improves domestic liquidity and supports credit growth without requiring the RBI to print new money or aggressively hike interest rates.
Historical Context: Echoes of the 2013 “Rajan Plan”
This is not the first time the RBI has used such surgical strikes to defend the currency. In September 2013, during the infamous “Taper Tantrum” crisis, the then RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan introduced a very similar FCNR(B) swap window.
At that time, India was part of the “Fragile Five” economies, and the Rupee was in free fall. The 2013 swap window was a massive success, attracting $34 billion in just three months. That intervention is widely credited with saving the Rupee and restoring global confidence in the Indian economy. The 2026 measures are a clear evolution of that successful blueprint, tailored to meet modern challenges.
Key Takeaways
- The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) introduced two special USD-Rupee forex swap facilities on June 12, 2026, to boost foreign currency inflows.
- The FCNR(B) swap facility targets fresh NRI deposits with a tenor of 3 to 5 years and is priced at par to eliminate hedging costs for banks.
- A concessional fixed swap rate of 1.5% per annum is provided for eligible External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs) and Overseas Foreign Currency Borrowings (OFCBs).
- Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) and statutory bodies are eligible for the ECB swap facility for loans with an average maturity of 3 years or more.
- Market analysts estimate that these facilities could attract between $40 billion and $70 billion in foreign capital to stabilize the Indian Rupee.
- The initiative follows the successful precedent of the 2013 swap window introduced by Governor Raghuram Rajan, which stabilized the currency during the Taper Tantrum.