Business leaders statement over the latest monetary policy of Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which kept the rates unchanged on 6th Feb (Thursday).
Mr. Mayank Jalan, President, Indian Chamber of Commerce (ICC) on Sixth Bi-monthly Monetary Policy Statement
Holding the repo and reverse repo rate same comes in consonance with the objective of having “accommodative” stance for reviving growth. It will also stabilize the current investment amid the rising retail inflation and boost consumption. As a Chamber we expect that the holding of the rate will complement the recent measures taken by the Government to boost the economy. The policy will be conducive to achieve the medium term target for consumer price index (CPI) inflation of 4% within a band of +/2 per cent alongside growth. The decision of holding the rates same twice in a row is taken to control the surge in inflation.’
Mr. Abheek Barua, Chief Economist, HDFC Bank.
Central Bank Watch: Looking beyond the policy rate, RBI supports growth
In terms of the policy rate, the RBI kept its stance as accommodative and signalled that there is space for further rate cuts. Going forward, our sense is that the central bank could take the first opportunity it gets to cut rates – as soon as the inflation optics start looking better (with vegetable price spikes cooling-off) and headline inflation comes in closer to the RBI’s target band. They are likely to rely on the fact that inflation is expected to drop sharply over the next 12 months (estimate at 3.2% in Q2 FY21). We now see a high probability of a rate cut (25bps) as early as Q1 FY21 (Apr-June 2020). (For our latest analysis on inflation and monetary policy see our report: Inflation Vs. Growth, which way is the RBI likely to sway?, 5 February, 2020).
On liquidity, we expect the RBI to keep liquidity in surplus over the coming months. In our opinion, the excess liquidity in the system, along with the announcement of the LTROs, could make it difficult to justify any plain vanilla OMOs (unsterilized) and reduce the possibility of the same.
The bond market reacted positively to today’s announcement and the 10 year gained by 5 bps, trading at 6.458% at the time of writing (from yesterday’s close of 6.505%). The short-end of the curve recorded a bigger rally with bonds maturing upto 5 years seeing a 15 bps fall in their yields with the announcement of the LTROs. In the short-run, as higher inflation prints in Q4 FY20 are more or less baked in, oil prices are likely to remain contained, and the government borrowing program has been in line with market expectations, the case for a range bound movement in yields – tilted downward – seems likely.
B Prasanna, Head – Global Markets, Sales, Trading & Research, ICICI Bank on RBI policy
Even as the MPC retains its accommodative stance and admits to further room for cut(s), it is constrained currently on the policy rate front as inflation remains uncertain and elevated. The MPC has however displayed its clear intent that several instruments are available at its disposal to support growth, ensure adequate systemic liquidity, enable better transmission and channelize better credit flow. Going forward we expect the MPC to react to an evolving growth-inflation situation. While the base case is still for a pause, probability of one cut cannot be ruled out sometime in the second half of the calendar year when inflation is likely to fall towards 4%.
Mr. Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, MD & CEO, Bandhan Bank
“On the back of the Union Budget, the Monetary Policy also aims to provide impetus to the economy and the industry. The announcement of incentivising of bank credit to certain sectors is encouraging. The projection of rural incomes increasing in future is in line with Bandhan Bank’s experience in these markets.”