RBI MPC Member Sees Negligible Chance Of Rate Hike In Near Term

The RBI has cut rates by a total of 125 basis points since February 2025.

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Weather risks, rising metals prices and elevated crude oil amid geopolitical tensions will weigh on the CPI.
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Chances of benchmark interest rate going up are "negligible" notwithstanding building up of inflationary pressure on account of geopolitical tensions, external member of RBI's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) Saugata Bhattacharya said on Wednesday.

Weather risks, rising metals prices and elevated crude oil amid geopolitical tensions will weigh on the consumer price inflation (CPI) going forward, Bhattacharya said.

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" I see chances of a need to raise the repo rate as negligible in the near term," he told PTI in an e-mailed interview.

Bhattacharya and the five other members of the MPC voted unanimously to keep the repurchase, or repo rate, at 5.25% in the policy meet earlier this month. The RBI retained its neutral policy stance, signalling rates will stay low for some time.

In the interview, he said there are no signs of any overheating of the economy despite the multiple stimulus measures.

The RBI has cut rates by a total of 125 basis points since February 2025, marking its most aggressive easing cycle since 2019. It reduced rates by 25 basis points at its December meeting.

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The central bank kept the rate unchanged in the August, October and February 2026 monetary policies.

On the inflation front, he said H1 FY27 is forecast to see CPI rising towards the 4% target. "One reason is the base effects of falling headline (and vegetables) inflation in FY26, which will now reverse. Second, the effect of precious metals prices. Excluding these, the underlying inflation is expected to remain benign," he said.

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Highlighting improving credit offtake, Bhattacharya said non-retail bank credit growth has steadily increased and is now flowing to large corporates as well.

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"Credit growth to large corporates rose to 7.5% year-on-year (YoY) in December 2025 (from 5.5% in December 2024) and to mid corporates at a continuing high 20% YoY. Credit to MSMEs rose 29%  YoY (from 12% in December 2024). Growth of credit to NBFCs too has risen almost 3x in December 2025," he said, adding that capacity utilisation remains around 75 per cent, though higher in certain sectors.

On growth, he said domestic consumption, which accounts for almost two-thirds of GDP, will remain the primary driver, though both domestic and external demands are necessary for sustained expansion.

"The effects of the fiscal, monetary and liquidity stimulus are still playing out. Data suggests a pickup in private investment in H1 FY26 and even FDI seems to be reviving," he said.

He also pointed to strong high-frequency indicators, including reasonably strong Manufacturing and Services PMIs in January, robust merchandise exports despite US trade frictions, and record-high monthly e-way bills indicating firm manufacturing activity.

Furthermore, he said it was early days for global trade developments following the US ruling on reciprocal tariffs and that tariff competitiveness with key competitors remains in flux.

"We await tariffs and trade deals with the US settling down to some equilibrium. In the meantime, trade data suggests that Indian exporters have largely diversified their destinations (other than a few sectors)," he said.

On the upcoming new GDP, CPI and IIP series, he said the revised methodologies and updated surveys will better reflect the current structure of the economy and allow for more accurate policy calibration.

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(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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