Ten out of a dozen institutions are expecting RBI to begin its rate-cut cycle in December, with seven predicting a 25 basis point easing in policy repo rate in December.
DBS Bank, Bank of Baroda, Bank of America and HDFC Bank are among the seven institutions expecting a 25 bps cut in December. PNB Gilts and ICICI Securities Primary Dealership are the two institutions, out of the 12, that are not expecting a cut in December and are instead predicting a February rate cut.
The RBI’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) decided to keep its policy repo rate unchanged at 6.5% during its tenth bi-monthly meeting on Wednesday. The MPC, however, unanimously voted for a change in stance to neutral, creating for itself the space to begin a rate-easing cycle, as consumer inflation remains within the legally mandated limits. The repo rate is the rate at which the RBI lends to banks.
“The monetary policy action gives greater flexibility and optionality to the MPC to act in sync with the evolving conditions and outlook. The balance between inflation and growth is well poised, the external sector remains stable and reflects the strength of the Indian economy,” RBI governor Shaktikanta Das said at the post-policy press conference.
Market participants are pricing in a 25-50 bps rate cut over the next year, with the average one-year overnight index swap (OIS) rate at 6.39%. OIS rates usually trade at a spread of around 25 bps over market forecasts for future benchmark rates.
Market participants will remain watchful of retail inflation and food inflation over the next few months, in addition to growth indicators. Supply disruptions amid conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine, and an aggressive spell of rains towards the end of the monsoon season can add to near-term risks.
The RBI maintained its growth projections at 7.2% for FY25 on the back of strong rural demand though this may not be enough to offset a weakness in industrial data, economists said.
“As December MPC approaches, the growth slowdown in India will become apparent, as inflation aligns itself to the 4% target. We expect repo rate cuts of 100 bps by December 2025, beginning December 2024. If rate cuts are delayed or smaller, downside risks to growth would rise,” said Rahul Bajoria, economist for India and Asean at Bank of America.
The change in stance by RBI follows the US Federal Reserve delivering a hefty 50 basis point rate cut in mid-September. However, strong economic data such as a larger-than-expected rise in the US non-farm payroll (NFP) data has reduced the probability of another 50 bps cut by the Fed in November.
The latest NFP data showed the biggest jump in six months in September, of more than 254,000 jobs, compared to expectations of 140,000 jobs. Markets are now expecting a 25 bps cut by the Fed in November.
“If there’s a 50 bps Fed rate cut again, then that would put pressure on RBI, but that seems to be off. I don’t think a December rate cut will happen. If it has to happen, it will happen in February because inflation numbers are going to be above 4, and growth numbers are still intact,” said Vikas Goel, MD & CEO, PNB Gilts.