That implies retail prices could take longer to fall back within the central bank’s target band of 2%-6%, belying expectations of some consumers and keeping the Reserve Bank of India on course to tighten further when its monetary policy committee meets later this month. The RBI, which has returned borrowing costs to pre-pandemic levels with 140 basis points of hikes since May, expects inflation to average 6.7% in the year to March.
As the wholesale price index falls, “lower input costs will be used by firms to offset the ongoing margin squeeze, thereby keeping CPI inflation sticky,” said Sonal Varma, an economist with Nomura Holdings Inc., who expects the headline print to remain above 6% until February.