India surprises by leaving policy rate unchanged, rupee
tumbles
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[October 05, 2018]
By Swati Bhat and Suvashree Choudhury
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The Reserve Bank of
India held interest rates unchanged on Friday, condemning the rupee to a
record low and surprising analysts who had expected a rate rise to
counter inflationary pressures arising from the weak currency and high
oil prices.
The RBI's monetary policy committee (MPC) left the repo rate <INREPO=ECI>
at 6.50 percent, though 35 out of 64 analysts surveyed by Reuters last
week had forecast a rate hike. The MPC also held the reverse repo rate <INRREP=ECI>
at 6.25 percent.
The panel however, shifted its policy stance to 'calibrated tightening"
from 'neutral'.
Five of the six members voted to leave the rate unchanged this time,
after the panel raised them by 25 basis points at each of its two
previous meetings since June.
"Today's stance of calibrated tightening essentially means that in this
rate cycle a rate cut is off the table, and that we are not bound to
increase rates at every meeting," said RBI Governor Urjit Patel at a
press conference. "As new data comes in we would look into changing our
policies accordingly."
Surprised by the RBI's inaction this time, analysts still expect the
central bank to raise rates by at least 50 basis points more going
ahead, as inflationary pressures become more pronounced.
The RBI reiterated its target of keeping consumer inflation at 4.00
percent in the medium term on a "durable basis", and projected a rate of
4.8 percent by June 2019, slightly better than the 5.0 percent forecast
it gave in August.
The 10-year benchmark bond yield <IN071728G=CC> fell to 8.05 percent
from 8.13 percent before the policy was announced, as traders expecting
a rate hike were caught wrong-footed.
The rupee <INR=D2> slumped as much 0.9 percent to a new all-time low of
74.23 against the U.S. dollar, weakening from around the 73.65 ahead of
the RBI policy statement.
"The first thing that came to my mind when I saw the decision was that
RBI seems to be more confident than the market on the dollar-rupee,"
Ashish Vaidya, executive director and head of trading at DBS Bank in
Mumbai.
"It seems like RBI chose financial stability over rupee because there is
no strong inflation pressure imminently."
The rupee has fallen more than 14 percent since January, making it the
worst performing major Asian emerging market currency.
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A guard stands next to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) logo outside
its headquarters in Mumbai, India, October 5, 2018. REUTERS/Francis
Mascarenhas
The decline steepened in recent weeks as rising crude price - India
imports two-thirds of its oil needs - and a sell-off by investors in
emerging markets cranked up the pressure on the country's external
balances. During April-June India's balance of payments slipped into
deficit for the first time in six quarters.
Other Asian central banks in nations running trade deficits and exposed to
portfolio outflows and higher oil prices have shown more urgency in hiking
interest rates.
Last week, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) hiked rates by 50 bps to 4.50
percent, adding to the three hikes worth 100 bps since May. Bank Indonesia added
25 bps to its four previous hikes this year, bringing rates to 5.75 percent as
expected, or 150 bps higher since May.
EXTERNAL RISKS
The RBI has also been preoccupied with a liquidity scare arising from a series
of debt defaults by Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) that
sparked redemption pressure at other shadow banking companies.
But the policy statement contained little on that, as the central bank has
aggressively bought government bonds through open market operations to keep
markets liquid, rather than resort to administrative measures to release more
cash into the system.
In its statement, the RBI noted substantial external risks to the growth and
inflation outlook, due to escalating trade tensions, rising oil prices, and
tightening financial conditions globally.
The RBI said that made it vital "to further strengthen domestic macroeconomic
fundamentals."
With a general election due by May next year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's
Hindu nationalist party will want to campaign on strong economic growth and
success in containing inflation.
Taking a more gradual approach to raising rates should make it easier to sustain
economic growth, with the RBI forecasting expansion of 7.4 percent for the
financial year ending in March and 7.6 percent for the following year.
(Additional reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal and Rajendra Jadhav; Writing by Euan
Rocha; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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