The Wholesale Price Index-based inflation may have eased to its weakest in 10 months in November but the Reserve Bank of India is not expected to cut repo rate, the key policy rate -- at which banks borrow from RBI -- in its mid-quarter review of the monetary policy on Tuesday.
A cut in the interest rate is expected only next month, when the central bank meets for the third-quarter review of its policy on January 29.
Analysts said there was chance of a cut in the cash reserve ratio by a further 25 basis points to infuse liquidity into the system, as borrowings by banks under RBI's daily Liquidity Adjustment Facility continued to be above the central bank's comfort zone of +/- one per cent of banks' net demand and time liabilities.
CRR -- the proportion of total deposits a bank has to keep with RBI as cash -- is at 4.25 per cent of banks' NDTL currently.
At the start of 2012, it had stood at six per cent and it was brought down to the current level in four tranches.
"Headline inflation eased unexpectedly, led by fuel and core inflation. This should provide RBI some comfort.
"However, this will not be enough to trigger a rate cut on December 18, although RBI will likely cut CRR again and signal the potential for rate cuts early next year," Leif Eskesen and Prithviraj Srinivas of HSBC said in a report.
In November, WPI rose 7.24 per cent from a year earlier, compared with 7.45