Bangkok Post

RBI leaves key rates unchanged

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India kept its policy rates on hold for the fourth straight meeting yesterday and retained its “neutral” stance even as inflationa­ry pressures have eased more than expected.

The RBI kept its policy repo rate unchanged at 6%, its lowest since November 2010, as unanimousl­y expected by 61 respondent­s in a Reuters poll.

The reverse repo rate also remained unchanged at 5.75%.

Five of six members on the monetary policy committee voted for a hold, while one wanted a hike in the repo rate.

Inflation concerns have eased substantia­lly following a crash in vegetable prices which is expected to keep price pressures soft for the next few months.

However, oil prices remain a risk, with India importing about 80% of its crude requiremen­t.

Bonds rose after the RBI’s statement, while the rupee firmed and stocks extended early gains.

The 10-year benchmark bond yield fell to 7.19% from 7.28% before the announceme­nt, while the rupee was trading at 64.95 to the dollar from 65.04 before. The main market index was up 1.8%.

The RBI projected economic growth of 7.4% for the current fiscal year that began on April 1.

It also lowered its April-September inflation projection to 4.7-5.1% from February’s 5.1-5.6%.

After hitting a 17-month high in December, retail inflation eased for the second straight month in February and by more than expected, to a four-month low of 4.44%. But it was still higher than the central bank’s medium term target of 4%.

That has prompted most market watchers to push back their forecasts for a rate hike to early 2019, from earlier estimates of the second half of this year.

While inflation fears have eased in the short-term, the RBI sounded cautious and opted to wait for more data instead of giving a clear indication of its policy path.

“The MPC reiterates its commitment to achieving the medium-term target for headline inflation of 4% on a durable basis,” it said in a statement.

The RBI is also mindful of the pace of India’s economic recovery, after a loan-fraud scandal worth over $2 billion at the country’s second largest state lender Punjab National Bank .

Greater regulatory scrutiny in the wake of the scandal could make banks more wary of lending and slowing down business activity.

 ?? AFP ?? An Indian navy officer walks past the entrance of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) head office in Mumbai yesterday.
AFP An Indian navy officer walks past the entrance of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) head office in Mumbai yesterday.

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