Monetary Measures |
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a.
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The policy rate i.e. Repo Rate cut by 25 bps from 8% to 7.75% with immediate effect.
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b.
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Consequently, the
reverse repo rate under the Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) and the
Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) stands reduced to 6.75 % and 8.75%
respectively.
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c.
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The Cash Reserve
Ratio (CRR) has been cut by 25 bps from 4.25% to 4.00% w.e.f. 9th
February 2013, infusing around Rs.180Bn of primary liquidity in to the
system.
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RATONALE BEHIND THE CUT IN POLICY RATES
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a.
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Moderating trend
in Inflation - Both the headline wholesale price inflation and its core
component, non-food manufactured products inflation, have indicated
softening trend. Further, indications of weaker pricing power of
corporate, the negative output gap in some sector and the stable international commodity prices indicates inflationary pressures have peaked.
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b.
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Slowing Growth -
Growth has decelerated significantly below trend in the last 2 years,
and overall economic activity remains subdued. The investment activity
has been way below desired levels and consumption demand too has started
to decelerate.
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c.
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Tight Liquidity
Condition – The liquidity conditions have remained tight. Although the
RBI lowered the CRR, successively in September and October 2012, and
carried out Open Market Operations (OMO) injecting systemic liquidity of
470 billion during December and January to augment liquidity, the
current average net LAF borrowings at Rs. 910 billion is well above the
Reserve Bank’s comfort level.
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INFLATION PROJECTION FOR FY13 REVISED DOWNWARDS FROM 7.5% TO 6.8%
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Taking comfort
from the recent moderation in inflation trend, particularly core
inflation, RBI has revised downward the baseline WPI inflation
projection for March 2013 to 6.80% from its earlier projection of 7.5%.
Despite this, the RBI has been more conservative on the inflation
trajectory going forward, emphasizing ‘upside risks from suppressed
inflation which could impart stickiness to inflation trajectory in FY14.
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M3 GROWTH PROJECTION REVISED DOWNWARDS
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RBI has noted that
due to slow growth in deposit and moderation in economic activity, the
M3 growth has remained well below the projected trajectory of 14%, while
the non-food credit growth has been in line with its indicated
projection of 16%. Keeping in view the seasonal pattern for the last
quarter, RBI has scaled down the M3 growth projection for FY13 at 13%
from the earlier target of 14% while non-food credit growth projection
is retained at 16.0 %.
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GDP GROWTH PROJECTION – REVISED DOWNWARDS FROM 5.8% TO 5.5%
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RBI in its First
Quarter Review of July 2012 had indicated a GDP growth of 6.5%, which
was later revised downward to 5.8% in its October policy review, due to
increasing global risk and accentuated domestic risks on account of
halted investment demand, moderation in consumption spending and erosion
in export performance. RBI has now scaled down the growth projection
even lower to 5.5%, citing the subdued industrial activity and sluggish
external demand.
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FUTURE TRAJECTORY OF THE POLICY ACTIONS
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With
growth becoming the primary target of RBI the guidance for monetary
policy is predictably for lower rates. However, RBI has stressed that
the scope for rate cuts is limited. It has noted that, the growth
impetus rest on broader policy reform and the fiscal and current account
deficits will need to moderate. Given the constraints, we expect that
the RBI is unlikely to tread the path of continuous rate cuts and may
ease the rates in a non-linear manner, as in the present instance, which
it did after a gap of over 10
months.
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IMPACT ON THE BOND MARKET
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The
sovereign bond market which opened weaker, due to less than expected
dovish comments in the RBI’s Policy pre-view document released
yesterday, reacted positively to the policy announcement. The benchmark
10 year sovereign bond yield which had moved up 4 bps compared to
previous day’s close, recovered the lost ground on policy announcement
and is presently trading around 7.85%. We expect the benchmark 10 year
sovereign bond yield to trade in a range of 7.80-7.90% going forward.
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