RBI surprises with a rate cut\, changes stance to neutral

RBI surprises with a rate cut, changes stance to neutral

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

By Suvashree Choudhury

MUMBAI (Reuters) - The (RBI) on Thursday unexpectedly lowered interest rates and, as anticipated, shifted its stance to "neutral" from "calibrated tightening" to boost a slowing after a sharp fall in the inflation rate.

The committee (MPC) of the RBI cut the repo rate by 25 basis points to 6.25 percent, as predicted by only 21 of 65 analysts polled by Most polled respondents expected the central to only change the stance, to neutral.

Four of six members of the voted to cut the rates, while all six voted for a change in the stance.

"Investment activity is recovering but supported mainly by public spending on infrastructure," the said in a statement. "The need is to strengthen private investment activity and buttress private consumption."

Rupa Rege Nitsure, at L&T Financial Services, called the central moves "the perfect policy response in the current circumstances."

Indian shares pared gains while 10-year bond yields slid 5 basis points after the surprise rate cut.

The rupee weakened to 71.69 to the dollar immediately after the announcement but strengthened soon after to 71.42.

The NSE Nifty was up 0.04 percent at 11068.05 while the 10-year benchmark government bond yield fell to 7.51 percent from Wednesday's close of 7.56 percent.

India's last rate cut, to 6.00 percent, was in August 2017.

Thursday's cut is welcome for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, which wants to boost lending and lift growth as it faces elections by May.

The ruling is already in an election mode. In its budget on Feb. 1, the government doled out cash to farmers and tax cuts to middle-class families, at the cost of a wider fiscal deficit and larger borrowing.

Economic growth fell to a worse-than-expected 7.1 percent in the July-September quarter from 8.2 percent, dragged down by slower consumer spending and farm growth, below analysts forecast for a 7.4 percent increase.

(Reporting by Suvashree Dey Choudhury; Editing by Richard Borsuk)

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First Published: Thu, February 07 2019. 12:41 IST