Categories: Economy

RBI may cut rates before scheduled MPC meet

To deal with the economic fallout of coronavirus outbreak, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is expected to ease key lending rate soon.

Accordingly, industry watchers contend that RBI might go ahead and ease lending rate before its scheduled Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meet slated for April. The move might happen as early as late Monday or in the coming week.

In fact, experts pointed out that a conducive rate cut scenario has been built with the decline in both CPI and WPI rates have declined in February.

Last month’s retail inflation has shown a decline to 6.58 per cent from January’s 7.59 per cent.

However, the retail inflation level continued to remain much above the RBI’s medium-term target for the CPI rate of 4 per cent with a band of +/- 2 per cent.

Nevertheless, even globally, US FED and BoE have cut rates to aid the industry.

“Even as RBI’s 4QFY20 inflation forecast of 6.5 per cent will likely be overshot by ~25-35bps, latter half of the year will see substantial correction in inflation, much below the 4 per cent target,” Edelweiss Securities’ lead eEconomist Madhavi Arora told IANS.

“Taking cues from other Asian central banks and the G-4 brigade, we think MPC could front-load the impending rate cuts in a pre-emptive fashion, if needed. The RBI may also continue with unconventional measures to ensure the credit spreads normalize in the current credit stress situation, led by both domestic and external factors.”

She added that RBI may also go in for a “LTRO 2.0” in line with the BoE and ECB style of long-term bank lending schemes.

Recently, RBI had conducted a Long Term Repo Operations (LTRO) aimed at providing additional durable liquidity to the Banking Sector to spur lending.

According to Karan Mehrishi, Lead Economist at Acuite Ratings and Research: “We believe an out of turn rate cut is possible to the tune of 50 bps. This is part of a global consolidated effort by central banks led by the Us Federal Reserve to calm the markets, as sovereign and high rated debt is experiencing yield spikes.”

“Coronavirus threat can be seen as a trigger point behind the move.”

(IANS).

indianarrative

Recent Posts

Royal Netherlands Navy’s HNLMS Tromp engages in Maritime Partnership Exercise with Indian Navy

In a move to strengthen defence ties between the two countries, Royal Netherlands Navy Ship…

5 hours ago

Baloch rights activist Mahrang Baloch highlights exploitation faced by women in Balochistan

Baloch rights activist Mahrang Baloch has highlighted the atrocities inflicted upon Baloch women by the…

6 hours ago

India is on the top rank in world artificial intelligence race: NetApp-Savanta report

The intelligent data infrastructure company NetApp recently released report on cloud complexity suggests a clear…

7 hours ago

Taiwan urges China to resume talks “without preconditions”

The Taiwan government on Sunday urged China to resume bilateral exchanges "without preconditions" after China…

7 hours ago

EAM Jaishankar describes Northeast India “big beneficiary” in India-Bangladesh ties

Describing Northeast India as a "big beneficiary" of dramatic improvement in India-Bangladesh ties, External Affairs…

8 hours ago

Chandrayaan-3 mission had huge impact on perception of Indians abroad: Jaishankar

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Monday said that the perception of people living abroad…

9 hours ago