HomeNewsBusinessEconomyRBI policy provides a dovish tweak, bar for further rate easing remains high

RBI policy provides a dovish tweak, bar for further rate easing remains high

Overall, the wait-and-watch policy of the RBI is prudent as it factors in incoming data prints into its reaction function.

October 02, 2025 / 08:54 IST
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RBI Monetary Policy Analysis
RBI Monetary Policy Analysis

In the end analysis, this policy turned out to be more interesting than was being anticipated by any market participant. True, there was no rate reduction, as was being broadly expected, and the stance also stayed unchanged. But the boring part end here as the RBI unleased a host of measures on the regulatory perspectives that seeks to strengthen the resilience and competitiveness of the banking sector, some measures to improve flow of credit and ease of doing business, one more step forward towards internationalization of the INR etc.

On the piece of resilience and the competitiveness of the banking sector, there were four specific measures that could have a wide-reaching impact over the medium to long term. The Expected Credit Loss (ECL) framework requires banks to highlight potential credit stress and provide for capital proactivity to manage the problem account. The implementation of the same has been pushed to April 1, 2027 while giving banks a 4-year period to fully comply with the same, thereby enabling banks to smoothen out any one-time provisioning impact at the start date.

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Importantly, it has also been proposed that there would be lower risk weights on certain segments – particularly for MSMEs and residential real estate, including home loans. Effectively, RBI seeks to energize credit flows to critical growth-oriented segments of the economy through regulatory changes. In a similar vein, it is envisaged to create an enabling framework for banks to finance acquisitions by Indian corporates. Furthermore, banks are currently disincentivized to provide loans to large corporates beyond Rs 10,000 crore.

As an overarching policy restriction, this is being relooked at and it is envisaged that concentration risks will now be investigated at the banking system level and will be managed through specific macro-prudential tools, whenever necessary. To boost investments into infrastructure, risk weights applied by NBFCs is proposed to be reduced for operational and high-quality infrastructure projects. Some benefits with respect to time frame of repatriation of foreign currency has also been provided to the exporters to enable them to tide over the difficult times of a stiff tariff regime.