RBI Monetary Policy: The MPC has raised the repo rate by 50 basis points to 5.9%, even as it retained inflation forecast and cut GDP growth estimates for FY23.
India’s GDP growth rate has been estimated at 13.5% for the April-June 2022 quarter by the statistics ministry, compared to the RBI’s forecast of 16.2%. On the growth front, even as Q1 GDP, industrial production and exports data surprised negatively, the more salient high frequency data was resilient.
The Reserve Bank of India will probably raise its repo rate by 50 basis points for a third straight meeting this week, according to DBS Bank Ltd. which revised its call from a 35-basis-point hike.
DBS is the latest to join the camp of those forecasting a bigger rate hike today, following a similar revision by Goldman Sachs. Citigroup has also firmed up its forecast for a half-point increase and expects the RBI to change its stance to “neutral”.
DBS revised its call amid stubbornly high inflation and a shift in the global policy environment “which has narrowed the room for gradual and incremental moves,” economist Radhika Rao wrote in a note. “The central bank’s hawkish policy bias will continue this week.”
India’s central bank has raised the benchmark rate by 140 basis points in three moves since May to 5.40% to tame inflation running past its target ceiling.
Nervous investor sentiments have triggered a flight to safety, Das says.
The US dollar has reached a new high, he says. Emerging market economies are confronted with challenges of slowing global growth, elevated food and energy prices, spillovers from advanced economy policies, debt distress and sharp currency depreciation.
"Economic activity in India remains stable, (and) gives us the confidence of dealing with the current problems," Das says.
However, the recent correction in global commodities may ease cost pressures in coming months, the RBI Governor says.
Inflation trajectory remains clouded in uncertainty
MPC believes persistent high inflation required policy response
This MPC action will support medium term growth prospects.
India's real GDP growth rate for FY23 is now projected at 7%, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das says. The GDP growth is seen at 6.3% in Q2 FY23 and 4.6% in Q3 FY23 and 4.6% in Q4 FY23.
The Indian basket of crude oil prices stood at $104/barrel in the first half of FY23, Das says. The MPC is assuming brent crude at $100 per barrel in the second half of FY23, he says.
The Indian rupee is a freely floating currency whose exchange rate is market determined, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das says.
The RBI does not have any exchange rate in mind.
The RBI intervenes to curb excessive volatility.
Our actions have helped in anchoring investor confidence
"In the medium term, the primacy of price stability in our inflation targeting famework provides bedrock for exchange rate stability," Das says.
India's interventions in the forex market are based on assessment on prevailing market conditions, Das says. The country's reserves remain strong, he says.
"In a policy tightening, it is arduous to provide forward guidance in a continuous evolving climate," he says. "Our actions will be carefully calliberated with data and evolving conditions."
It has been decided that 28-day VRRR to be merged with 14-day VRRR auction, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das says. Going forward, only 14-day VRRR auction will be conducted, he says.
The Reserve Bank of India proposes to extend rules that apply online payment aggregators to offline payment aggregators as well, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das says.
The currency movement is not the factor driving monetary policy decisions, says RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das says. The MPC's decisions continues to be guided by domestic factors.
There are two components in monetary policy framework: growth and inflation.
MPC decisions are based on twin objectives, with primacy given to price stability.
For dealing with issues not relating to growth and inflation, the RBI has other tools, Das says.
India's Monetary Policy Committee is yet to meet to discuss RBI's letter to the government on inflation consistently breaching the central bank's target, Das says.
"We are expecting inflation to come down close to the target over a two-year cycle. That was our expectation earlier and even now," Das says. "But there are so many uncertainties coming in from time to time."
The Reserve Bank of India doesn't have a rupee level in mind, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das says. Earlier, he had said that the rupee is a freely floating currency whose exchange rate is market determined.
That, when the Indian rupee is testing 82/dollar levels.
"The issue is not the sojourn, but the journey," said RBI Deputy Governor Michael Patra when asked if the central bank is targetting 2019 interest-rate levels to move to a neutral policy stance. "And the journey has two milestones--when inflation gets into the tolerance band and when it aligns with the target. You’ll know then."