RBI likely to keep policy rates
unchanged as trade deal reduces urgency
India's central bank is expected to keep policy
rates unchanged on Friday, while focusing on improving the pass-through of the
previous year's rate cuts, with a US-India trade deal alleviating the
need for more immediate support to the economy.
A large majority of economists polled by Reuters
before the deal was announced on Monday - 59 of 70 - had expected a status quo
in rates, but a minority had called for another cut as inflation remained low
and US tariffs threatened to disrupt India's strong run of economic growth.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has already cut
rates by 125 basis points since last February, bringing the policy repo rate
down to 5.25 per cent.
"The US-India trade deal further
bolsters the case for the RBI keeping rates unchanged this week," Dhiraj
Nim, an economist at ANZ Bank, said.
India's growth is running near its potential while
inflation is expected to move back towards the central bank's target,
underpinning the case for a policy pause, he said.
India's GDP growth is expected to hit 7.4 per cent
in the current financial year and the government's economic adviser has
forecast growth at 6.8-7.2 per cent for next year.
The Indian economy is in a "Goldilocks
phase", Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra said at the last
policy meeting in December. It had forecast growth for the fiscal year ending
March 31 at 7.3 per cent and CPI inflation at 2 per cent.
IMPROVING TRANSMISSION OF RATE CUTS
While the economy has been strong, the central bank
has had to intervene across forex and bond markets amid large foreign outflows
from the Indian equity markets up until the trade deal was announced.
The RBI sold $30 billion from its foreign exchange
reserves between September and November - according to the latest data
available - in turn withdrawing rupee liquidity and adding to pain for the bond
markets already under pressure from record government borrowings.
The benchmark 10-year yield has barely fallen
over the past year, despite the large rate cuts, keeping funding costs high and
limiting the economic benefits of easier monetary policy for borrowers.
The benchmark 10-year yield acts as a signal for
pricing of borrowings for banks and corporates.
"The challenge now is to ensure that
transmission of previous rate cuts is not hampered, while the central bank remains
on an extended pause," Kaushik Das, chief economist - India, Malaysia, and
South Asia at Deutsche Bank, said in a note.
Analysts expect the central bank to step up open
market bond purchases by at least Rs.1
trillion ($10.92 billion) to support liquidity and reduce
strains in the bond market.
The urgency for RBI support for the bond
market has increased following the higher-than-expected gross borrowing
programme for the next fiscal year.
"Higher market borrowing numbers mean concerns
around bond supply will remain a challenge for policy
transmission," economists at Nomura said in a note.
www.business-standard.com,
dt. 04-02-2026