Having cut benchmark lending (repo) rate by 0.75 per cent so far this year, RBI today kept it unchanged at 7.25 per cent as also the cash reserve ratio (CRR) at 4 per cent in its bi-monthly policy review meet.
If food and core prices remain soft over the next few months, global commodity prices stabilise at low levels and the US Federal Reserve action does not pose a meaningful worry, space for a final 25 bps rate cut could open up, HSBC said.
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan said in the monetary policy review today that significant uncertainty on the factors influencing it will be resolved in the coming months, including persistence of high inflation, monsoon as well as actions by the US Federal Reserve which is expected to shift to hiking rates.
According to HSBC, the future policy action would be determined by fuller monetary transmission of the front-loaded repo rate cuts, evolution of food prices and monsoons, government action on supply side reforms including improving the quality of fiscal spend, and signals from the Fed.
"Furthermore, wage hikes for civil servants, short-term inflationary impact of the GST and insufficient movement on food distribution reforms, could make the target harder to achieve," HSBC Chief India Economist Pranjul Bhandari said in a research note.
