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India’s monetary policy committee (MPC) on Wednesday voted to cut interest rates in response to a steeper-than-expected fall in inflation, and maintained a neutral policy stance. The decision was in line with a Bloomberg poll of economists where a majority of respondents had forecast a 25-basis-point cut in rates.
Four members voted in favour of a 25-basis-point cut, one member voted for a 50-basis-point cut and one voted for status quo.
“Some of the upside risks to inflation have either reduced or not materialised. Consequently, some space has opened up for monetary policy accommodation, given the dynamics of the output gap,” the policy statement said.
The rate cut follows a drop in retail inflation to a level below the mandated range of 2-6 percent . Consumer price inflation fell to 1.54 percent in June, driven down by both food prices and softer core inflation. As per the monetary policy framework, the MPC has a mandate to maintain inflation in a band of 4 percent (+/- 2 percent).
To be sure, the MPC does not need to react to one month’s inflation. However, a number of analysts have suggested that recent trends point to a structural decline in inflation.
“Inflation expected to rise from current lows going ahead. Farm loan waiver, GST, pay hikes are risks,” RBI Governor Urjit Patel said while addressing the media after the policy announcement.
The central bank made no change in its projections for the current fiscal. The forecast for gross value added growth for the fiscal 2017-18 has been maintained at 7.3 percent.
Growth indicators, which have weakened, added to calls for a rate cut. GDP growth for the March-ended quarter slipped to 6.1 percent. High frequency indicators like growth in core sector industries and the manufacturing purchasing managers’ index have are also pointing to some volatility in the economy.
On new lending, the transmission in policy rate has been much stronger, especially in segments where there is high competition, Patel said. The part of the loan portfolio that is tied up on account of base rate the transmission has been slower, he added.
The experience with marginal cost of funds based lending rates has not been “entirely satisfactory,” according to Acharya. The RBI has constituted a study group to determine whether bank lending rate can be linked to market determined benchmarks, he told reporters at the policy press conference. The report will be submitted by September.
The RBI will also introduce final guidelines for triparite repo – is a type of repo transaction where a third entity called a Tri-party Agent will act as an intermediary, Acharya said. This agent will facilitate services like collateral selection, payment and settlement, custody and management. The introduction of tripartite repo was part of the recommendations of the HR Khan committee report on development of corporate bond market.
Following the policy announcement, the yield on the 6.79 percent 2027 government bond rose 3 basis points to 6.47 percent. The rupee strengthened by 0.6 percent to 63.730 against the dollar. The benchmark Nifty 50, however, extended losses even though the policy decision was along expected lines.
(Read more about this on BloombergQuint.)
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