Along expected lines, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) left the Repo and reÂverse repo rate unchanged at 6.75% and 5.75% respectively on Tuesday (DBS Group Research; India: RBI to await Budget cues; 1Feb16). While the commenÂtary offered little surprises, the tone was more balanced as the central bank is concerned over the evolving inflation outlook (especially pay commission imÂpact) and structural reform (including fiscal discipline).
The RBI raised marginally its CPI inflation estimate for Mar17 to 5% from 4.8% earlier, without factoring in the pay commission increases. The central bank also added that while part of the bounce in inflation (one-off adjustment in the housing index) on the higher wage bill can be overlooked, but generalised pressures due to stronger demand could disrupt the disinflationary trend. Sticky service sector inflation also received a mention. GDP estimate for FY16/17 was held at 7.4% with downside risks and rising to 7.6% in FY16/17.
The RBI also emphasised on the need for structural reforms to contain supply-side pressures and fiscal discipline to ensure that the monetary policy could assume a growth-supportive role. Into FY16/17, with fading incremental boost from low crude prices, the fiscal backdrop is a lot more challenging. The upcoming Budget faces a tough choice between fresh spending commitments, a need to maintain capital expenditure and compensate for low tax buoyancy/ divestment proceeds. We see risks that the deficit target is adjusted modestly higher.
On liquidity, policymakers interpreted the on-going tighter conditions as temÂporary/seasonal rather than structural, keeping reserve ratios unchanged. The RBI highlighted than base money growth had quickened to 12% this year from 10.5% year before, even as nominal GDP growth has been slowing. This sugÂgests sufficient base money is being created, highlighting the need to overlook short-term shortages. The firm 10Y yields were seen as not only a reflection of inflation concerns domestically but also elevated yields amongst the emerging market peers in light of external volatility.
Looking ahead, we maintain our call that a 25bp rate cut at the Mar/Apr policy review, contingent on the Budget contents. A move in March will be an interÂ-meeting cut. Emphasis will also be on jumpstarting transmission to ensure that the policy changes have the desired impact on the ground and for supporting private sector activity.