As inflation trends upwards, RBI may keep interest rate unchanged in the upcoming monetary policy review on Tuesday and possibly take a call post Budget 2016-17, which will give a direction about key macroeconomic parameters, including fiscal deficit, experts said.
However, some experts also feel that there is a case for front-loading of interest rate cut to give a push to economy.
“We can hope for rate cut. There is a case for deliberation and deliberations are related to data points and data points are going to very apparent after the Budget. Once the budget points on fiscal achievement those are hardwired then there is compelling case for RBI to cut rate,” Yes Bank Managing Director Rana Kapoor told PTI.
According to a Citi report, RBI is likely to keep key policy rates unchanged until the budget and go for a 0.25 per cent easing in March or April this year.
“Considering the near-term risks on CPI inflation and the uncertainties around FY17 budget, we expect the RBI to leave rates unchanged until the budget on February 29,” Citigroup said in a research note.
WPI as well as retail inflation has been on rising trend. In December WPI-based inflation stood at (-)0.73 per cent, while retail inflation was at 5.61 per cent.
RBI is scheduled to announce its sixth bimonthly monetary policy review on Tuesday, February 2.
As per the DBS report, “the Reserve Bank of India meets next on February 2 and we expect the benchmark rates to be kept on hold.”
The repo or the short-term lending rate at which banks borrow from RBI came down to 6.75 per cent. In the last calender year, RBI reduced key policy rates by 1.25 percentage points.
HSBC said it expects RBI to maintain status quo in the forthcoming policy review and wait for the fiscal roadmap presented in the Budget.
“The current instability in markets and insufficient transmission (by banks) are further reasons why the RBI may not rush to cut the rate on February 2,” HSBC said.
The RBI is most likely to achieve its January 2016 target of having inflation under the 6 per cent mark, but is committed to getting the headline number down to 4 per cent in two years from now.
Global financial services major Barclays said that the central bank is likely to go for a cut in policy rate during the April-June period of the year.
RBI is expected to leave all benchmark rates unchanged in its policy review meet on February 2 but it is likely to maintain a dovish stance.
However, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research said it “continue to expect” the RBI to cut the key policy rate by 25 basis points in the February policy review.
“We continue to expect a final 25 bps RBI repo rate cut on February 2. That said, the RBI is approaching the end of its rate cutting cycle. The repo rate, at 6.5 per cent then, would be well below the average CPI inflation rate of 7 per cent (using it as proxy for inflation expectations),” it said.