RBI Holds Steady: Economists See No Urgent Rate Hike in Sight

Economists do not expect the RBI to urgently tighten policy rates amid a fast-evolving geopolitical situation. RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra indicated the central bank is in a wait-and-watch mode and won't commit to future rate paths. April inflation is projected to rise to 3.9% YoY, driven by food inflation in perishables, while core inflation remains stable. Key risks include El Nino impacts, high global oil prices, and a weak rupee affecting imported costs.

Key Points: Economists: RBI Unlikely to Tighten Policy Rate Soon

  • RBI in wait-and-watch mode on rates
  • April inflation expected at 3.9% YoY
  • Core inflation stable at 3.4%
  • El Nino and global oil prices key risks
2 min read

Economists don't expect RBI to exhibit any urgency to tighten policy rate

Economists predict RBI will not rush to tighten policy rates amid geopolitical tensions, with April inflation expected to rise to 3.9% YoY.

"We are in a wait-and-watch mode. - RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra"

New Delhi, May 8

Economists on Friday said they do not expect the Reserve Bank of India monetary policy committee to exhibit any urgency to tighten policy as yet amid fast-evolving geopolitical situation.

RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra said last month that Central Bank is closely monitoring the fallout from the West Asia conflict and will not make firm commitments on the future path of policy rates.

He signalled that the central bank was in no hurry to move on rates. "We are in a wait-and-watch mode," he said.

According to Radhika Rao, Senior Economist and Executive Director, DBS Bank, India's April inflation is expected to rise to 3.9 per cent YoY from 3.4 per cent in the previous month, edging closer to the mid-point of the target range, versus a benign 2.1 per cent in FY26.

Food inflation is likely to have edged up towards 4.5 per cent from 3.7 per cent, reversing last year's weak momentum, driven by selected perishables such as tomatoes and eggs, along with cereals and edible oils, and further exacerbated by untimely rains in some regions.

"Core inflation, however, is expected to remain stable and modest at 3.4 per cent, helped by a pullback in precious metal prices. Signs of an updrift should also be captured in transport inflation due to ATF prices and services in the restaurant and hospitality sector (commercial cooking gas price adjustments)," said Rao.

The broader impact of high global oil prices is yet to percolate through retail inflation, as pump fuel prices remain unchanged. Markets will also monitor El Nino developments and their impact on monsoon strength.

Meanwhile, the jump in imported costs on account of elevated commodity prices and a weak rupee is likely to be more apparent in the WPI gauge, which had already outpaced retail inflation in March and is expected to extend the uptrend in April as well, said the economist.

In its April meeting, the RBI kept repo rate unchanged at 5.25 per cent with a neutral stance. Assocham had appreciated the "calibrated step aimed at strengthening stability in the macroeconomic environment", adding that it helps sustain growth momentum and ensure price stability.

Madan Sabnavis, Chief Economist, Bank of Baroda, indicated dimmed likelihood of any further rate cuts as the RBI has flagged El Nino as a risk to inflation, too, and projected a GDP growth at 6.9 per cent and inflation at 4.6 per cent.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As a small business owner, I was hoping for a rate cut, but I understand the caution. The RBI is right to focus on price stability first - food inflation hits everyone hard, especially the poor. Let's hope the monsoon brings relief 🙏
V
Vikram M
I appreciate the RBI's 'wait and watch' approach, but I worry about the weak rupee impact on imports. If petrol prices remain unchanged artificially, that can't last forever. Eventually, the consumer will feel the pinch.
J
James A
Interesting perspective on core inflation staying stable. The pullback in precious metals is a factor I hadn't considered. Let's see how the WPI numbers play out - that could be the real indicator of imported cost pressures.
R
Rohit P
The fact that food inflation is driven by tomatoes, eggs, and edible oils shows how vulnerable our supply chains are. We need better cold storage and transport infrastructure. Just my two rupees 🍅🥚
K
Kavya N
My father is a farmer in Karnataka, and he's really worried about El Nino this year. If the monsoon fails, all the RBI's careful planning won't help. The weather is the real policy maker here 😅
M
Michael C
Keeping repo rate at 5.25% seems prudent given global uncertainty. The inflation target of 4

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