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RBI likely to hike rate by 25 bps on Apr 6

March 29, 2023 17:48 IST

The Reserve Bank may go for a final 25 basis points increase in the current rate hike cycle next week and a reduction would come in only by the end of third quarter of FY24, economists at Axis Bank said on Wednesday.

RBI

Photograph: Shailesh Andrade/Reuters

As per media reports, RBI officials met economists on Tuesday, and the latter have suggested the central bank to go for a 25 basis points hike in key rates.

Since May 2022, the RBI has hiked rates by 250 basis points, hurting borrowers and some are already concerned about loan tenors extending beyond their working lives as a result of the hikes.

 

The RBI has been hiking rates with an eye to tame inflation, which mostly remained beyond the upper tolerance limit of 6 per cent.

“I am leaning towards a further and final 0.25 percentage point hike in rates,” Chief Economist at Axis Bank Saugata Bhattacharya told reporters, adding that the hike will tame the stubbornly high core inflation.

He also said the slowdown in growth visible in anecdotal evidence at present, coupled with some cool down in inflation, should prompt the six-member Monetary Policy Committee to cut rates by the end of the third quarter of FY24.

Bhattacharya also noted that it is too early to change the “withdrawal of accommodation” stance of the RBI and that some tweaks can be expected in the way it is communicated at the next review on April 6.

The RBI will shift the stance to “neutral” in the June review, he said.

Bhattacharya said there is anecdotal evidence pointing to signs of slowdown in growth, which makes him peg the FY24 real GDP growth estimate at 6 per cent, much below the RBI's own estimate of 6.4 per cent.

He said the evidence includes working capital cycles getting elongated, non-bank lenders not being able to pass on rate hikes to their borrowers for fear of losing business, low-cost automobile sales getting impacted largely because of higher compliance costs pushing up prices of end goods, and, low and mid-level housing projects witnessing sluggish sales and enquiries.

Bhattacharya said the resilience shown by the economy in maintaining the growth momentum is remarkable, but ultimately, the aggregate demand is bound to get impacted because of the hikes and also other factors.

He pointed out that the increased investments by multinationals setting up shops in india and creating relatively higher paying jobs is helping the overall demand situation at present.

By the end of the third quarter of FY24, when growth slowdown will become more evident, and once the inflation cools down to 5-5.50 per cent range to exhibit a clear trend, the RBI will go for a rate cut of 25 basis points, he said.

This will result in the FY24 exit in the key repo rate at 6.50 per cent, the same level as at the start of the fiscal, he said.

Bhattacharya said globally there are uncertainties in the overall economic climate, and never before in the economic history have "we seen such kind of a phase".

The good news is that all the major fast paced economic indicators in the US and also Europe are turning better, he said.

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