RBI likely to keep interest rates unchanged


Staying put: A police officer walks past the RBI logo inside its headquarters in Mumbai. The central bank will likely keep its benchmark repurchase rate at 6.5% for a seventh straight policy meeting, according to all 38 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. — Reuters

MUMBAI: India’s central bank will likely keep interest rates unchanged today, with chances of an early cut fading after the government warned of a coming heatwave and the economy grew faster than expected.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will likely keep its benchmark repurchase rate at 6.5% for a seventh straight policy meeting, according to all 38 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

Most economists expect the central bank to stick to its hawkish stance, although some see a chance it could signal rate cuts on the horizon.

The timing of any easing has been complicated though by the threat of rising food prices and signs of strong demand in an economy growing close to 8%.

RBI governor Shaktikanta Das has said he wouldn’t consider easing until inflation settles around the 4% target on a sustainable basis, reducing the chances of an early cut.

The RBI is likely to keep its rate unchanged, “retain the monetary policy stance of ‘withdrawal of accommodation’, sound optimistic on growth, and continue to reiterate the commitment to the 4% headline inflation target,” Santanu Sengupta, Goldman Sachs Group Inc’s India economist, wrote in a recent note.

Some economists have pushed back their forecasts for rate cuts to later in the year. Morgan Stanley now expects the easing cycle to begin by October instead of June given India’s better-than-expected growth.

Teresa John, an economist at Nirmal Bang Equities Pvt, pushed out her rate cut call too, citing concerns that heatwaves will keep inflation high.

The RBI is trying to rein in inflation while still keeping monetary policy supportive enough for the economy, implying rates will remain stable for now.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who’s seeking a third term in office in elections starting in two weeks time, said April 1 that growth should be the central bank’s top priority over the next decade.

The possibility of the US Federal Reserve (Fed) delaying its rate cuts also gives the RBI a breather. Like other emerging market central banks, the RBI tends to track Fed policy in order to keep its currency stable.

The consumer price index rose 5.09% in February from a year earlier, well above the RBI’s target, largely due to higher food prices. The core measure, which strips out volatile food and fuel costs, has tumbled though, implying there’s little demand-push inflation in the economy.

The voting pattern of the six Monetary Policy Committee members will be closely watched too. Jayanth Varma, an external committee member, was the only one calling for a rate cut in the February meeting. If others join him this week or vote for a change to the policy stance, that may be a sign the RBI is ready to pivot to rate cuts.

The RBI has maintained its hawkish stance of “withdrawal of accommodation” since June 2022. Some economists say there’s a chance it may shift to a neutral stance now that core inflation is easing, consumer spending in some sectors is soft and the government is reining in its fiscal deficit.

“There is a small likelihood” of the stance being changed to neutral, “but if that happens, it will be a positive surprise for the market,” wrote Deutsche Bank AG’s India economist, Kaushik Das, in a note. — Bloomberg

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Business News

Shell says it remains committed to mobility business in Malaysia
Federal Court rules in SC’s favour, Ricky Wong’s leave application dismissed
Regional expansion to bode well for CTOS
Miti: Semiconductor industry offers Malaysia chance for exponential growth
Ringgit slightly higher at the close
Awantec to strengthen its synergistic offerings to drive growth
Bursa Malaysia hits all-time high market capitalisation of more than RM2 trillion
Sapura Energy gets US$1.8bil worth of PLSV-related contracts
OCK enters tower leasing agreement, marks debut into Laos
AmBank, CGC announce additional RM400mil under the SME Portfolio Guarantee Scheme

Others Also Read