RBI likely to cut rates again by 2017-end: Chris Wood of CLSA

Long-awaited earnings rebound should finally happen in Q4CY17, CLSA believes

Puneet Wadhwa  |  New Delhi 

Christopher Wood
Christopher Wood

There is more room for the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to cut rates even after the recent 25 basis point (bps) cut earlier this week, and it is likely that the central bank will do so one more time before the end of calendar year 2017 (CY17) given the high real in India, writes Christopher Wood, managing director and equity strategist at in his weekly note, GREED & fear.

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The in India (difference between the yield on risk-free sovereign treasury-bill and the headline CPI) stands at around 4.7%, is also the reason why the rupee has remained strong, Wood notes.

Recently, the largest state-owned bank, State Bank of India (SBI) cut on savings bank deposits by a 50 bps citing high real It introduced a two-tier interest rate structure on savings bank deposits. With effect from July 2017, a savings bank balance of over Rs 1 crore will earn an interest rate of 4% per annum (p.a.), while the ones with Rs 1 crore or less will earn an interest rate of Rs 3.5% p.a.

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Markets, especially the banking stocks, gave a thumbs down to the RBI’s move to cut the by just 25 bps earlier this week – the first cut since October 2016 – making it the first Asian central bank to do so thus far in calendar year 2017 (CY17). 

While reviewing the monetary policy, continued to maintain a ‘neutral’ stance, citing risks to inflation going ahead. This triggered a negative reaction in the stock market, which expected the central bank to be more accommodative and cut rates aggressively given that the recent consumer price inflation (CPI) print came in at 1.54% for June – much below the Monetary Policy Committee’s (MPC’s) target range of 2% - 6%.

The local mutual fund boom, Wood says, is not just confined to stocks. Inflows into bond funds have also been surging, which has helped drive a boom in corporate bond issuance.

“The growing mutual fund ownership of is also leading to a more active secondary bond market. Still one risk to this bond issuance boom is that foreigners have nearly reached the limit of what they can own in terms of corporate bonds,” he says.

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As regards the stock market, is of the view that a correction, if it happens, is more likely to be a globally correlated one, since the Indian domestic fund flow momentum remains robust. is also of the view that the long-awaited rebound should finally occur in the fourth quarter of CY17 (Q4CY17) given the low base effect from last November’s

Banking sector, Wood says, is on the right track as regards addressing the bad asset problem with the non-performing loans (NPLs) of 12 corporate groups formally being referred by the to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). 

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“The political reality is that the growing likelihood that Modi will be re-elected in 2019 is another reason for these delinquent corporate borrowers to agree to some form of a deal. This is because it means there is no near-term prospect of returning to “business as usual”, which historically for many Indian “promoters” has meant effectively treating state-owned as their own private piggy banks,” he writes.