Higher fuel prices drive up March CPI to five-month high at 3.81%

Food prices rose 1.93% on the year, slower than a 2.01% annual increase in February

Reuters  |  New Delhi 

A vehicle waits to be filled up with diesel at a petrol station in New Delhi (photo: Reuters)

Higher fuel costs drove up India’s retail to its highest level in five months in March, data showed, vindicating a central bank decision last week to keep its policy rate on hold amid concern about price pressures. Consumer prices rose by an annual 3.81 per cent, their fastest pace since October 2016, compared with February's 3.65 per cent, the Ministry of Statistics said on Wednesday.

The rise was lower than the 3.98 per cent forecast by economists in a Reuters' poll.

Retail fuel accelerated to 5.56 per cent from 3.90 while gains in food prices slowed to 1.93 per cent from 2.01 per cent. Worries about a possible spike in food prices, should India experience below-average monsoon rains this year, persuaded the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to keep its key lending rate on hold for a third straight meeting last week.

But in a subtle and less expected shift to a tightening bias, the central bank raised the reverse repo rate — the return banks get on deposits at the — by 25 basis points, to help mop up excess liquidity in the banking system.

The monsoon season, which delivers 70 per cent of India's annual rainfall, is critical for the country’s rice, cane, corn, cotton and soybean crops as nearly half of its farmland lacks irrigation.

Graph
A US government weather forecaster last month projected the possibility of an El Niño weather pattern developing later this year, a possibility forecasters in Japan and Australia put at 40-50 per cent. "There are reasons to think that will continue to accelerate," said Shilan Shah, economist at Capital Economics consultancy in Singapore. Such concerns prompted the last week to revise up its projection for the year that started in April. It now expects headline to average 4.5 per cent in the first half and 5.0 per cent in the second, above its medium-term target.

Shah expects headline to accelerate towards the upper bound of the RBI's 4-6 per cent target range this year, which he said could prompt the central bank to raise its benchmark lending rate over the coming months. The bank is currently targeting the lower end of that band.

Other economists are not predicting a rate hike so soon.

While remaining committed to keeping retail closer to the lower end of its target, the central bank will be hard pressed to overlook growth concerns.

In a sign that the economy is still smarting under the aftermath of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's decision in November to ban high-value currency notes, industrial output unexpectedly fell 1.2 percent in February from a year earlier. Cost-push pressures, meanwhile, are building due to higher global commodity prices. The rollout of a new sales tax from July also poses an upside risk, as does an impending increase in house rent allowance to millions of public sector workers.

The central bank's monetary policy panel expects the latter to push up headline by as much as 150 basis points over a period of 12-18 months.

"If everything becomes worse together then towards the end of the financial year 2018 there is a slight risk (of a rate hike)," said Anjali Verma, an economist with PhillipCapital India.

Higher fuel prices drive up March CPI to five-month high at 3.81%

Food prices rose 1.93% on the year, slower than a 2.01% annual increase in February

Food prices rose 1.93% on the year, slower than a 2.01% annual increase in February
Higher fuel costs drove up India’s retail to its highest level in five months in March, data showed, vindicating a central bank decision last week to keep its policy rate on hold amid concern about price pressures. Consumer prices rose by an annual 3.81 per cent, their fastest pace since October 2016, compared with February's 3.65 per cent, the Ministry of Statistics said on Wednesday.

The rise was lower than the 3.98 per cent forecast by economists in a Reuters' poll.

Retail fuel accelerated to 5.56 per cent from 3.90 while gains in food prices slowed to 1.93 per cent from 2.01 per cent. Worries about a possible spike in food prices, should India experience below-average monsoon rains this year, persuaded the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to keep its key lending rate on hold for a third straight meeting last week.

But in a subtle and less expected shift to a tightening bias, the central bank raised the reverse repo rate — the return banks get on deposits at the — by 25 basis points, to help mop up excess liquidity in the banking system.

The monsoon season, which delivers 70 per cent of India's annual rainfall, is critical for the country’s rice, cane, corn, cotton and soybean crops as nearly half of its farmland lacks irrigation.

Graph
A US government weather forecaster last month projected the possibility of an El Niño weather pattern developing later this year, a possibility forecasters in Japan and Australia put at 40-50 per cent. "There are reasons to think that will continue to accelerate," said Shilan Shah, economist at Capital Economics consultancy in Singapore. Such concerns prompted the last week to revise up its projection for the year that started in April. It now expects headline to average 4.5 per cent in the first half and 5.0 per cent in the second, above its medium-term target.

Shah expects headline to accelerate towards the upper bound of the RBI's 4-6 per cent target range this year, which he said could prompt the central bank to raise its benchmark lending rate over the coming months. The bank is currently targeting the lower end of that band.

Other economists are not predicting a rate hike so soon.

While remaining committed to keeping retail closer to the lower end of its target, the central bank will be hard pressed to overlook growth concerns.

In a sign that the economy is still smarting under the aftermath of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's decision in November to ban high-value currency notes, industrial output unexpectedly fell 1.2 percent in February from a year earlier. Cost-push pressures, meanwhile, are building due to higher global commodity prices. The rollout of a new sales tax from July also poses an upside risk, as does an impending increase in house rent allowance to millions of public sector workers.

The central bank's monetary policy panel expects the latter to push up headline by as much as 150 basis points over a period of 12-18 months.

"If everything becomes worse together then towards the end of the financial year 2018 there is a slight risk (of a rate hike)," said Anjali Verma, an economist with PhillipCapital India.
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