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RBI unlikely to grant India Inc's wish for lower rates

April 03, 2018 16:53 IST

Pressure has been mounting on the Reserve Bank of India to cut interest rates in the wake of declining retail inflation and the need to fuel growth momentum. 

However, the RBI will have to do a tightrope walk as globally interest rates are inching upwards. 

The Reserve Bank is unlikely to yield to the India Inc’s pressure for a benign monetary policy stance by keeping policy rates unchanged in its first monetary policy review of 2018-19 to be announced on Thursday against the backdrop of hardening global crude oil prices. 

This would also be the first monetary policy announcement after the Budget, which has slightly deviated from the fiscal consolidation roadmap. 

 

The six-member Monetary Policy Committee, headed by RBI Governor Urjit Patel, is to meet on April 4 and 5. 

Pressure has been mounting on the Reserve Bank of India to cut interest rates in the wake of declining retail inflation and the need to fuel growth momentum. 

However, the RBI will have to do a tightrope walk as globally interest rates are inching upwards. 

Last month, the US Federal Reserve raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point and signalled that it is on track to raise rates two more times in 2018. 

Besides, the RBI has to take into consideration the rise in crude oil prices which temporarily touched USD 70 per barrel. 

Industry body Ficci has pitched for a benign stance in the monetary policy for strengthening the revival signs in the economy. 

"Over the last few months, the signs of economic recovery are visible, but there is a need to further push the growth levers to see a complete turnaround in manufacturing and enable investments to reach full scale," the industry chamber said. 

According to Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance fund manager Kunal Shah, MPC committee will highlight risks of inflation inching towards 5 per cent mark in 2018-19 specially due to MSP hikes and gradual closing of output gap. 

MPC members could take some comfort if monsoon performance is good and prices are seen at moderate levels. 

"We think MPC will only be able to adopt hawkish stance if inflation surprises towards 5.5 per cent by year end and likelihood of which are minimal today," he said. 

"We expect the MPC to keep policy rates on hold and maintain its neutral stance," analysts at American brokerage Morgan Stanley said in a note. 

Bank of America Merill Lynch (BofAML) also echoed the view, but added that it expects a rate cut in the August review if the monsoon is favourable. 

"We expect the RBI MPC to strike a balanced tone on April 5, with March quarter inflation set to average 4.6 per cent, 0.50 per cent below their 5.1 per cent forecast," it said. 

After surging to a concerning 5.2 per cent in December, the headline inflation cooled off to 5.07 per cent in January and further to 4.4 per cent in February. 

Other industry chamber Assocham is of the view that the central bank would opt for status quo as the government's budget announcement to provide farmers 1.5-times of minimum support price (MSP) for their produce may jack up inflation. 

"This would leave very little leeway for the RBI to cut rates in this monetary policy and hence we expect the RBI to keep the key interest rates unchanged," Assocham said in a statement. 

Currently, repo rate -- the short term lending rate at which RBI lends to banks -- stands at 6 per cent. Consequently, the reverse repo rate is 5.75 per cent and the marginal standing facility rate and the bank rate stand at 6.25 per cent. 

According to Kotak Mahindra Bank, the RBI is expected to be on an extended pause as inflation is likely to remain close to 4.5 per cent during 2018-19. 

"We expect the RBI's Monetary Policy Committee to maintain status quo as it awaits clarity on monsoon, sustainability of high crude oil prices post the winter squeeze, and global financial conditions," it said in a note. 

The MPC has two other representatives from RBI -- Deputy Governor Viral Acharya and Executive Director Michael Debabrata Patra. 

The three external members are: Chetan Ghate, Pami Dua and Ravindra Dholakia.

Image: RBI governor Urjit Patel. Photograph: Reuters.

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