"We believe that the RBI will remain on hold for the rest of this fiscal," ratings agency Crisil said in a note, citing factors like the continuing upward risks to the 6 per cent target for January 2016 that will make a rate reduction difficult.
Additionally, another restricting factor will be the implementation of a new monetary policy framework as suggested by the Urijit Patel committee, it added.
Analysts attributed the lower September print at a low of 6.5 per cent to the base effect, something which RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan had alluded to in the last monetary policy statement.
As for the trajectory in the future, they said apart from the high base, the ongoing correction in the global crude prices will also help ease inflation.
However, Japanese brokerage Nomura said there are "downside risks" to the RBI's January 2016 forecast on CPI, and added the number shall touch 6 per cent by mid-2015, much ahead of the targeted January 2016.
"We grow more confident that Governor Rajan will cut policy rates from February after CPI eased in September," they said in a note.
With official data released today saying that inflation measured by wholesale prices dropping to a five-year low of 2.7 per cent in September, analysts at Citi said the upside risks to the 6 percent CPI target have "subsided materially".
It said the benign outlook on global commodities, stability in the rupee, drop in core CPI and supply side efforts to contain food inflation make it confident on the inflation outlook.
