RBI likely to hold rates in June amid inflation uptick, external risks: Report
New Delhi, June 1
The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee is likely to maintain a wait‑and‑watch stance at its June meeting and hold rates unchanged amid rising inflationary pressures and external volatility, a report said on Monday.
The report from CareEdge Ratings said inflationary concerns have intensified due to projected below‑normal monsoon and recent retail fuel price hikes.
A sharp rise in WPI inflation also raises the risk of a faster second-round pass-through to consumer prices, it said, adding that the current uptick in inflation is a supply shock and not demand-driven.
The report added that domestic growth outlook has also eased considerably as the economic impact of the prolonged conflict transmits through multiple channels.
Tone of the policy statement will be crucial, as the possibility of policy rate hikes towards the end of the year cannot be ruled out if the inflationary pressure prolongs, the ratings agency said.
Both global and domestic bond yields rose, and USD/INR has weakened considerably since the onset of the conflict.
The report further said future trajectory of the policy rate will depend on the MPC's assessment of evolving inflation dynamics and whether current price pressures are transient or become entrenched in household expectations.
If conflict persists and inflation risks become entrenched in household expectations, rate hikes are possible by CY26-end.
The real policy rate is expected to remain below its long‑term average of 0.95 per cent for three quarters before converging to this by Q1 FY28, the firm forecasted.
It projected FY27 GDP growth at 6.7 per cent assuming crude oil averaging USD 90/bbl. However, prolonged conflict and oil prices around $110/bbl could lower growth closer to 6 per cent.
In another report, the firm said that its CareEdge Debt Quality Index (CDQI) has witnessed an upward trend since November 2021.
The index continued its rising trend as it reached 97.15 in April 2026 as compared to 96.89 in March 2026 driven by enhanced rated debt in the higher investment-grade rating categories.
An upward movement indicates an improvement in the quality of debt benchmarked against the base year.
— IANS
Reader Comments
Typical "wait and watch" approach from RBI—it's what they always do. But with WPI inflation climbing and fuel prices up, I worry about second-round effects hitting household budgets. The government should focus on easing supply chains and managing monsoon risks, not just leave it to MPC.
Interesting projections—6.7% GDP growth assuming oil at $90/bbl seems optimistic given global volatility. If crude touches $110, we're looking at 6% growth and possible rate hikes by year-end. I hope RBI's assessment is correct that current inflation is transient. 🤞
As a small business owner, I'm relieved rates are being held for now. But the real worry is household inflation expectations becoming entrenched—that's when things get sticky. The MPC needs clear communication on their inflation-fighting resolve while not choking off recovery. Tough balance!
The CDQI reaching 97.15 is a positive sign for debt quality—Indian corporate balance sheets seem improving. But bond yields rising globally and rupee weakening complicate things. Hope RBI can manage external volatility without sacrificing growth. Let's see the actual MPC statement tone.
Why is no one talking about the monsoon forecast more? Below-normal rains mean food inflation will spike, and RBI will be forced to hike later anyway. 🥱 Holding rates now is just delaying the inevitable. They should have started raising gradually already.
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