The policy repo rate, which was reduced by 0.25% to 7.50% was in line with expectation but the accompanying statement admitted that headroom for further cuts is "limited".
The statement identified two major hurdles to aggressive monetary easing -- the stubbornly high CPI, which could adversely affect inflation expectations, and the high current account deficit.
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"We now forecast further rate cuts of only 50 bps for the remainder of the year," Mathur added.
According to RBS for an aggressive easing cycle to fall in place, the current account deficit will need to stabilise at 2.5 to 3% of the GDP.
Though the RBI acknowledged the recent reduction in the trade deficit, but it views even the reduced level of around $15 billion per month to be on the high side, RBS said.
As long as consumer inflation remains high, real deposit rates for the household sector will remain negative and draw households away from bank deposits into physical assets, such as gold and real
The RBI today cut its short-term lending rate by 0.25% to spur growth and revive investment but sounded a note of caution on further easing of rates on account of high food inflation and current account deficit.
The current account deficit (CAD) represents the difference between inflows and outflows of foreign currency. The CAD had touched a record high of 5.4% of GDP in the July-September quarter.
The trade deficit in January widened to $20 billion, the second highest rise ever in a month. The biggest trade gap of $21 billion was recorded in October, 2012.
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