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“Keeping in view the prevailing and expected inflation-growth dynamics, which are well balanced, the MPC decided to change the monetary policy stance from withdrawal of accommodation to ‘neutral’ and remain unambiguously focused on a durable alignment of inflation with the target, while supporting growth,” said the monetary policy statement, adding that the change in stance provides flexibility to the MPC while enabling it to monitor the progress on disinflation which is still incomplete.
According to Das, the prevailing and expected inflation-growth balance have created congenial conditions for a change in monetary policy stance to neutral.
“Even as there is greater confidence in navigating the last mile of disinflation, significant risks – I repeat significant risks – to inflation from adverse weather events, accentuating geopolitical conflicts and the very recent increase in certain commodity prices continue to stare at us. The adverse impact of these risks cannot be underestimated,” he said.
After increasing the repo rate by 250 basis points (bps) to 6.5 per cent between May 2022 and February 2023, the MPC kept the repo rate unchanged in all the previous nine policy review meetings.
Yield on government bonds softened after the MPC’s decision to change the stance to neutral. The yield on the benchmark 10-year government bond fell below the psychologically crucial 6.80 per cent mark in the early trade after FTSE Russell announced that it will include Indian bonds in its indices.
The benchmark yield fell to 6.74 per cent, against the previous close of 6.81 per cent.
The RBI projected a real gross domestic product (GDP) growth for 2024-25 at 7.2 per cent with Q2 at 7.0 per cent; Q3 at 7.4 per cent; and Q4 at 7.4 per cent. Real GDP growth for Q1:2025-26 is projected at 7.3 per cent. Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation for 2024-25 is projected at 4.5 per cent with Q2 at 4.1 per cent; Q3 at 4.8 per cent; and Q4 at 4.2 per cent. CPI inflation for Q1:2025-26 is projected at 4.3 per cent
Global index provider FTSE Russell will include India’s sovereign bonds in its Emerging Markets Government Bond Index starting September 2025, potentially attracting significant foreign investment into Indian bonds. After being on FTSE’s watch list for three years, Indian bonds are set to comprise 9.35 per cent of the index on a market-value weighted basis. The total market value of the index is $4.7 trillion, according to FTSE.
“The yield fell in the morning after the inclusion, but the market was looking at MPC,” said a dealer at a state-owned bank. “The change in stance has now led to further positive sentiment and now rise in speculations about rate cut in December.”
First Published: Oct 09 2024 | 11:00 AM IST