Higher commodity prices, an increase in fuel pump prices (likely from March after state elections), services’ reopening pressures and elevated household inflation expectations are upside risks to inflation, believe analysts at Nomura, who expect headline inflation to average 5.8 per cent in FY23, above the RBI’s forecast of 4.5 per cent.
Meanwhile, India’s retail inflation hit 6.01 per cent in January, while the wholesale price inflation (WPI) rate remained in double digits for the tenth consecutive month at 12.96 per cent though down marginally from 13.56 percent recorded in the preceding month, recent data releases showed.
“The increase in CPI inflation was largely driven by an adverse base effect and continued supply side constraints. With commodity prices, especially oil, rising, the supply-side disruptions along with rising input costs pressures will keep inflation higher over the coming months. We expect CPI inflation to remain elevated in the 5.5-6 per cent range until April 2022, before easing towards 5 per cent from the June 2022 quarter onwards,” said Tanvee Gupta Jain, economist, UBS Securities.
Also read: What is making FIIs nervous in emerging markets? Those at Quant Eco Research, too, expect inflation pressures to persist. Going into FY23, they see the possibility food, core, fuel-related inflation as the proximate drivers of the overall headline inflation.
"While easing of supply chain disruptions, favorable statistical base effect, capex-oriented government spending, and interest rate normalisation would argue for a sizeable deceleration in CPI inflation, there could be upside form a catch up on pass-through of elevated input prices as organic economic recovery strengthens," they wrote in a recent note.
Given the developments, analysts at BofA Securities have cut their December-2022 Nifty target to 17,000 from 19,100 earlier.
“Our US economists now expect a fast Fed hiking cycle, with 175/100 basis point (bp) hike in calendar year 2022/2023. Fed/RBI hiking cycles since 1994, suggests market valuations could contract. That said, past cycles also suggest market downsides are blunted if supported by robust earnings growth. India is well-placed and is supported by 'growth-focused' fiscal/monetary policies,” wrote Amish Shah, head of India Research at BofA Securities in a recent note.