"The Monetary Policy Committee has reiterated its focus to maintain medium-term inflation at 4 per cent and therefore has maintained its neutral monetary policy stance, though it is now more comfortable with the inflation trajectory since several upside risks have reduced or not materialised," Crisil said in a note.
Describing the rate cut in line with its expectation, Crisil said "The timing was opportune since inflation has dipped to record lows and is only likely to rise gradually hereon. But we do not expect any further reduction in the repo rate this fiscal and expect a prolonged pause from here."
The recent dip in inflation was accentuated by demonetisation-led crimp in demand and seasonal downside pressures on food, most of which are temporary and will soon fade, the rating agency warned.
Japanese brokerage Nomura said overall, the rate decision and its neutral stance were in line with expectations. The neutral stance suggests that the RBI's decision-making remains data-dependent.
Singaporean brokerage DBS said the neutral policy stance shows that the RBI remains fixated on the inflation outlook, rightly so given its central mandate, rather than being burdened by other considerations, which include supporting growth and financial stability.
Looking ahead, given the disinflationary pressures in core inflation and ongoing structural corrective steps in food management suggest inflation is likely to stabilise around 4 per cent from two-three quarters from now, it said.
However, SBI Research said it expects more rate cuts in the year such as increased focus of the MPC on growth, which is a signal of more cuts going ahead; focus on fall in real neutral rates which in Q4 of FY15 was 0.6-3.1 per cent but is now trending at 1.25 per cent given the weak growth.
the December 6 policy, on weak growth and low inflation, after today's more-than-expected dovish policy.
"We continue to see three compelling factors for another RBI cut. Inflation risks are overdone: we track July inflation at 2 per cent (excluding HRA impact), even after a tomato price hike and average FY18 inflation at 3.7 per cent.
"Second, the output gap is unlikely to close any time soon, with high lending rates delaying recovery. Finally, imported inflation risks are receding, with oil prices coming off and a softer dollar," BofA-ML said.
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