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Bankers see rates falling by 25-40 bps more before Mar

October 04, 2019 21:40 IST

Of the six-member rate-setting monetary policy committee, five members voted for a 25 bps cut while one by 40 bps, the RBI said.

Illustration: Uttam Ghosh/Rediff.com

Welcoming the 25 basis points rate cut - fifth in a row and to a decadal low of 5.15 per cent on Friday - bankers are expecting 25-40 bps more reduction through the course of the fiscal, given the Reserve Bank's focus on growth that has been sagging for months now.

HDFC Bank's chief economist and executive vice-president Abheek Barua said though the latest rate cut was on expected lines, market was disappointed as they were expecting a larger cut.

 

Of the six-member rate-setting monetary policy committee, five members voted for a 25 bps cut while one by 40 bps, the RBI said.

"The 25 bps rate cut coupled with an explicit policy acknowledgement of further rate cuts would ensure that fiscal and monetary policy work in tandem in arresting growth concerns," SBI chairman Rajnish Kumar said.

Barua said while markets are somewhat disappointed, as they were expecting a larger cut, the latest cut needs to be seen cumulatively with the 110 bps reduction so far this year-taking the cumulative cut to 135 bps since February.

Recognising the weak growth outlook, the RBI sharply lowered its GDP estimate to 6.1 per cent in FY20 from 6.9 per cent previously.

The RBI clearly signalled its continued focus to revive growth, implying that more rate cuts are in the offing.

"We expect 25-40 bps more cuts in this fiscal," Barua said, adding RBI is also likely to keep liquidity conditions in surplus in the remaining part of the year.

StanChart chief executive Zarin Daruwala said the RBI reaffirmed its strong commitment to growth with the latest reduction and continuing with its accommodative stance.

"The cumulative reduction of 135 bps so far in 2019, along with the recent cut in corporate tax should help revive growth in the coming months," she said.

The newly-appointed managing director of Punjab National Bank Mallikarjuna Rao said the RBI has continued with an accommodative stance, suggesting possibility of further rate reductions.

"This rate cut will perfectly complement the fiscal measures announced by the government to help strengthen private consumption and spur investment activity going forward," Rao said.

Indian Bank managing director Padmaja Chunduru said with inflation being within the target, the forward guidance remains accommodative to revive growth.

"We believe that the transmission will be faster now that banks have already introduced repo-linked retail and MSE products and the rate cuts will be passed on to these borrowers," she said.

With the busy and festive season having started, this rate cut will boost market sentiments.

"We expect the demand to improve and the main challenge now is to revive consumption-led recovery and spur private investments post tax corporate rate cuts," she added.

Kotak Mahindra Bank's president for consumer banking Shanti Ekambaram said the ongoing festive season is critical from a consumption revival and further monetary policy action will depend on the impact of the twin benefits of fiscal and monetary policies on demand and growth.

Syndicate Bank managing director Mrutyunjay Mahapatra said combined with fiscal stimulus like tax rate cuts and investment incentivisation, the sentiments and over-all economic outlook is expected to be much better.

IBA chief executive VG Kannan said once again the RBI has given more thrust to growth than inflation and also supplemented the recent government measures to propel domestic growth.

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