The rate-setting panel is widely expected to keep the benchmark rate unchanged as it tackles the threat of a rising inflation due to the sudden spike in food prices
Te Reserve Bank’s rate-setting panel will begin its three-day meet on August 8. Most economists and analysts expect the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) to hold the repo rate at 6.5 percent and continue to focus on withdrawal of accommodation as retail inflation is likely to breach the central bank’s upper threshold of 6 percent.
“Since the last RBI policy, inflationary pressures have increased. The sharp jump in vegetable prices have pushed expected inflation for the next two-three months above six percent. Cereal and pulse prices have also moved up. In this backdrop, the RBI should turn extra cautious at the upcoming MPC meeting,†says Pankaj Pathak, fund manager- fixed income, Quantum AMC.
Pathak expects the RBI to remain on hold, maintain its policy stance as ‘withdrawal of accommodation’ and raise the CPI forecast by 20-30 basis points to 5.3-5.4 percent for FY24. “A hawkish pause is widely expected and is already a part of the market psyche. The bond market will take cues from the RBI’s assessment of the current spike in food prices and its impact on the overall inflation outlook and monetary policy,†he adds.
According to Bloomberg, overnight-indexed swaps indicate a possible decline in domestic borrowing costs only in the second half of 2024. Mint Street has by-and-large ruled out a rate-cut in this calendar year because the sharp rise in food prices may keep inflation outside RBI’s comfort zone.
In April, the Monetary Policy Committee hit the pause button after lifting rates by 250 basis points from a historic low of 4 percent in FY23. In its previous three meetings, the central bank emphasized that the pause must not be interpreted as a pivot because it remains watchful of inflation: