04-06-2023 06:13 PM | Source: PR Agency
RBI Monetary Policy Alas a Pause
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The Reserve Bank of India surprised the market with a pause in its rate hike campaign leaving the policy repo rate unchanged at 6.50%. The RBI Governor emphasized that this pause was only for this meeting and the Monetary Policy Committee wouldn’t hesitate to act as needed in future meetings to bring inflation down. The MPC retained its stance of withdrawal of accommodative.

The Governor likened the RBI’s stance as a “war on inflation” observing that this war was far from being won. Inflation remains above the RBI’s upper threshold of 6% (last print: 6.4% in Feb). At the most recent inflation reading, the policy rate is barely in real positive territory and interest rates are still seen to be accommodative. Then why have they paused

The short answer: financial stability. The recent failures / bailouts of banks such as Silicon Valley Bank in the US and Credit Suisse in Europe has raised the risk of financial instability. This could pose growth risks for the global economy. At such a juncture they deemed it prudent to wait and watch rather than hike.

Growth has returned to its central place in RBI’s framework. With inflation projected to fall below 6%, and no mention of the 4% official target of inflation, it appears that RBI is comfortable with its projection of inflation in the coming year. Average inflation is projected at 5.2%. GDP growth was marginally marked up to 6.5% for FY24. The impact of the 290 bps of tightening over the last year is now expected to affect the real economy. The clear emphasis seems to be support for growth unless inflation again surprises above 6% consistently.

The other key factor appears to be the relative stability of the Indian Rupee. In the past several months, the RBI has been able to rebuild its forex reserves back above US$600 billion thanks to this stability.

Lastly the RBI is mindful of the large government borrowing programmer this year. With this in mind, the RBI also indicated that it would be agile in liquidity management. We are now close to a neutral liquidity position – and at the current pace of outflows (currency and reserve demand), the liquidity demand from the RBI is likely to be close to ? 4 lakh crores. A part of this can be filled by forex flows if the currency is stable and financial conditions globally are easy. However, it is likely that the RBI will need to respond to liquidity needs through open market operations later this year

The market is reading this policy as a “pivot” by the RBI. While inflation risks continue, the focus clearly appears to be on growth. With a US recession / global economic slowdown being a distinct possibility, it is possible that growth may undershoot the forecast.

The unexpected pause and the promise on agility on liquidity was cheered and yields across the curve dropped by around 10 basis points immediately after the policy announcement. In the near term, the policy is expected to remove some fears from the market and bonds are expected to be relatively well bid.

 

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