Times of Oman

With RBI keeping interest rates on hold, quantitati­ve easing to unfold

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Fitch Solutions has revised its forecast for the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to keep its policy repurchase (repo) rate on hold at 4 per cent throughout FY22 (April 2021 to March 2022) from its prior view for a 25 basis point cut to 3.75 per cent.

This comes on the back of RBI pledging to buy up to Rs 1 lakh crore of bonds in Q1 of FY22 to cap borrowing costs and to support the economy’s recovery.

Meanwhile, Fitch revised its inflation rate forecast to an average of 5 per cent in FY22, up from 4.6 per cent previously, due to elevated inflationa­ry pressures which underscore expectatio­n for the RBI to keep its policy rate on hold.

The RBI held its policy repo rate at 4 per cent at its monetary policy meeting on April 7. Accordingl­y, the reverse repo rate was left at 3.35 per cent.

In addition, the RBI announced a secondary market government securities acquisitio­n programme (G-SAP 1.0), committing to buy up to Rs 1 lakh crore worth of government bonds, taking another step towards formalisin­g quantitati­ve easing.

Fitch said it had initially expected another policy rate cut to arrest the rise in government bond yields since the Union Budget announceme­nt in February.

Bond purchase guidance

“However, having an explicit bond purchase guidance from RBI following the announceme­nt of G-SAP will also achieve a similar effect, if not even be more effective than a rate cut on capping the increase in bond yields.”

Government bond yields have trended higher since the Union Budget announceme­nt in February, given the government’s substantia­l market borrowing plan of Rs 14.3 lakh crore. To be sure, the

RBI had already been buying government bonds in the secondary market and held Rs 3.1 lakh crore worth of bonds in FY21.

However, the announceme­nt of G-SAP marked the first time the RBI had committed to an explicit quantity of bond purchase.

“We believe that this enhances the certainty of the bond market on evolution path of bond yields over coming months. This will complement existing open market operations and ‘operation twist’ the central bank conducts to cap increases in bond yields.”

‘Operation twist’ refers to simultaneo­us purchase of long-end bonds and sale of short-end bonds to cap long-end yields. Following the announceme­nt, government 10-year nominal bond yields fell 12 basis points from the day’s high, indicating that the G-SAP announceme­nt had helped to soothe the nerves of bond market participan­ts.

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