Key Points

The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee is set to potentially announce its third consecutive rate cut this week. Inflation remains benign at 3.2%, well below the RBI's 4% target, creating a favorable environment for monetary easing. Global economic challenges and a need to support domestic growth are driving the potential rate reduction. Market experts and rating agencies are closely watching the decision, with some projecting a significant rate cut to boost economic momentum.

Key Points: RBI MPC Signals Third Rate Cut Amid Benign Inflation

  • RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra to announce policy decision on June 6
  • Inflation at 3.2%, lowest since July 2019
  • Market expects third consecutive rate cut
3 min read

RBI MPC begins, all eyes on 3rd rate cut as inflation stays benign

RBI's Monetary Policy Committee likely to cut repo rate to 5.75% as inflation stays low and growth needs support

"Domestic liquidity and financial stability concerns have receded - Dr Soumya Kanti Ghosh, SBI Group Chief Economic Adviser"

New Delhi, June 4

The Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting kicked off on Wednesday to decide on the repo rate cut and according to economists and industry experts, the Central Bank is likely to go for a third 25 bps cut in the repo rate to 5.75 per cent.

Chaired by RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra, the committee’s decision will be announced on June 6. The Reserve Bank has already reduced the repo rate by 50 basis points in the previous two monetary policy reviews, lowering it to 6 per cent.

Market participants are now watching closely for signs of a potential third rate cut, as expectations build for further monetary support to boost domestic growth amid worsening global macroeconomic conditions.

The RBI’s dovish turn is primarily driven by two macroeconomic indicators: benign inflation and signs of cyclical slowdown.

Headline CPI inflation remains consistently below the RBI’s medium-term target of 4 per cent, while GDP growth appears to be softening due to external shocks such as trade disruptions from recent US policy moves.

Several rating agencies and global institutions have downgraded India’s GDP growth projections for FY26. Although the RBI maintained its 6.5 per cent growth estimate in April, others have revised expectations to a 6.0 per cent–6.3 per cent range.

“The MPC has clearly shifted from a neutral to an accommodative stance, indicating the RBI’s intent to inject liquidity and support growth. This pivot is reinforced by April’s CPI inflation easing to 3.2 per cent, the lowest since July 2019 and staying well within the RBI’s comfort zone,” said Bajaj Broking Research.

With inflation expectations anchored, growth momentum moderating, and external vulnerabilities persisting, the environment is becoming more favourable for another rate cut.

While the final decision will depend on evolving global conditions, especially from advanced economies — market consensus is strengthening around the likelihood of a third rate cut to help sustain India’s growth path, said the report.

A new SBI report has even projected a mega 50-basis point rate cut in June’s RBI MPC policy.

“Domestic liquidity and financial stability concerns have receded. Inflation is expected to stay within the tolerance band. Keeping the domestic growth momentum intact should be the main policy focus and provide the justification for a jumbo rate cut,” according to Dr Soumya Kanti Ghosh, Group Chief Economic Adviser, SBI.

With liquidity in an extended surplus mode, liabilities are getting repriced faster in the current rate-easing cycle. Banks have already reduced interest rates on savings accounts to the floor rate of 2.70 per cent.

Also, fixed deposit (FDs) rates have been reduced in the range of 30-70 bps since February 2025. Transmission to deposit rates is expected to be strong in the coming quarters, said the SBI report.

—IANS

- IANS

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the RBI rate cut article:
P
Priya K.
As someone with a home loan, I'm really hoping for this rate cut! My EMIs have already reduced by ₹1,200 after the last two cuts. RBI should definitely go for 50bps this time - our economy needs this boost. 🙏
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Rahul S.
While rate cuts help borrowers, what about senior citizens depending on FD interest? Rates have fallen from 7% to barely 6% in 2 years. RBI must balance growth with protecting savers' interests too.
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Anjali M.
Good move by RBI if they cut rates again. Inflation is under control and global situation is uncertain. Better to make credit cheaper for businesses and home buyers now rather than wait for crisis. Jai Hind!
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Vikram P.
RBI should be careful - too many rate cuts too quickly might lead to asset bubbles. Remember what happened in 2008! Better to keep some powder dry for future shocks. Slow and steady wins the race.
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Sunita R.
As a small business owner, lower interest rates mean everything! Last cut helped me expand operations. Hope RBI gives one more push - we need to compete with Chinese manufacturing now more than ever 🇮🇳
K
Karan D.
Rate cuts are good but banks aren't passing full benefits to customers. My home loan rate reduced only 0.3% when repo cut was 0.5%. RBI should ensure better transmission before cutting further.

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