Financial services majors like HSBC, DBS, Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BofA-ML) and State Bank of India expect RBI to go for a 25 basis points rate cut during its policy review meet later this month.
Retail as well as wholesale price based inflation dived to new lows in August on falling global commodity prices.
Consumer Price Index based inflation, which RBI considers as benchmark, eased to 3.66 per cent in August from 3.69 per cent the previous month, while the one based on Wholesale Price Index tumbled for the 10th straight month to (-)4.95 per cent compared with a provisional (-)4.05 per cent in July.
BofA-ML in a research note said "We grow more confident of our September 29, 25 bps RBI rate cut call after August CPI inflation came in at 3.66 per cent and July CPI inflation was revised down to 3.69 per cent from 3.78 per cent earlier."
It further added that the CPI inflation remains well on track to the RBI's "under 6 per cent" January 2016 forecast, notwithstanding a second consecutive poor monsoon.
"We continue to believe that the Modi government will use supply-side measures rather than the RBI to fight a rain shock. On balance, we continue to expect the RBI to cut 25 bps each on September 29 and February 2," BofA-ML said.
"In sequential annualised terms, both headline and core inflation are running below the RBI's January 2016 target of 6 per cent, which should give the RBI enough confidence to cut the policy rate by a further 25 bps on September 29," HSBC said.
Experts however said that the only thing that could potentially hold back the RBI is a disruptive reaction to US Fed's FOMC meet. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, is scheduled on September 16-17.
On the possibility of rate hike by the US Federal Bank, DBS said, "In the remote chance that the US raises rates this week, the RBI might prefer to extend the wait-and-watch stance to allow markets to stabilise and price in further US rate increases, before lowering Indian rates further."
RBI, which has lowered rates thrice so far this year by 25 basis points each, is scheduled to hold its next bi-monthly monetary policy review on September 29. However, two of the three rate cuts this year have been announced outside the scheduled reviews.
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