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RBI steps out with a bold move; will India Inc respond?

The RBI has signalled its willingness to move quickly, decisively, and unconventionally. But monetary policy can only set the stage. It is now up to the private sector, financial institutions, and investors to read the signal and act.

June 08, 2025 / 09:54 IST
Reserve Bank of India

Reserve Bank of India

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s recent policy decisions are not just incremental changes in the interest rate corridor, they represent a meaningful shift in the central bank’s stance. With a 50 basis point repo rate cut and a staggered 100 basis point reduction in the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR), the RBI has made it clear that it is prepared to move decisively in support of growth.

What makes this policy action noteworthy is not just its magnitude, but its message. Central banks often move cautiously, especially in volatile times. Yet here, the RBI has chosen to pre-empt risk aversion with confidence. It is responding to a macroeconomic environment where inflation has softened, and growth remains below potential. This isn’t reactionary policymaking, it is anticipatory and strategic.

The decision to cut CRR, unlocking Rs 2.5 lakh crore (approximately $30 billion) over the next few months, aligns with a broader shift seen globally. In September 2024, China, facing similar growth headwinds, injected liquidity through a CRR cut that released $142 billion. India’s move may be smaller in scale but is symbolically powerful: it underscores the RBI’s readiness to act not just as a monetary guardian, but as a growth partner.

But policy moves, no matter how bold, do not operate in a vacuum. They need to be contextualized within the larger framework of fiscal reforms. The government’s earlier decision to recalibrate income tax slabs has already placed Rs 1 lakh crore into the hands of taxpayers. Combined with past OMOs (open market operations) and now a meaningful easing cycle, India is effectively laying down its version of quantitative easing - deliberate, localized, and designed for impact.

The real test, however, lies ahead

For years, India’s private sector has been in balance sheet repair mode. Focused on deleveraging and navigating global uncertainty, capital expenditure has remained conservative despite visible opportunities. That phase must now end. Liquidity is no longer the constraint. Interest rates are no longer prohibitive. The time has come for the private sector to lean forward - to invest, to build, and to create.

Financial Markets: Between Liquidity and Leadership

Financial markets have already begun to respond. India's 10-year bond yields have already in free-fall mode for the last three months. It has dropped from a high of 6.789 percent to current levels of 6.222 percent. Equity markets have welcomed the surprise cut on Friday with a 250-point jump in the Nifty 50, which is back above the 25,000 levels. Rate-sensitive sectors like banks, real estate, and auto are witnessing renewed interest as they were amongst the top movers.

But there’s a deeper undercurrent here. With deposit rates trending lower and inflation well-anchored, investors are facing a shrinking real return environment in traditional instruments. The natural outcome is a shift toward higher-yielding assets, particularly equities. Retail investors were on the back foot after the markets topped out in September 2024. This gush of fresh liquidity could reshape flows back into capital markets. No wonder the primary market is already starting to heat up with a series of IPOs lined up to absorb this liquidity.

Markets are ultimately forward-looking. Liquidity can lift prices temporarily, but only earnings and capital formation can sustain a true bull cycle. The challenge now is to ensure this monetary tailwind translates into business investment and productivity gains.

The Way Forward: From Support to Self-Sustaining Growth

This policy cycle marks more than a response to a slowdown—it’s a call to action. The RBI has signalled its willingness to move quickly, decisively, and unconventionally. But monetary policy can only set the stage. It is now up to the private sector, financial institutions, and investors to read the signal and act.

There is an opportunity here to move from tactical recovery to strategic expansion. The tools are in place. The intent is visible. The question is whether the ecosystem is ready to convert liquidity into long-term leverage.

As we look ahead, one thing is clear: this is not just a rate cut. It is a reset of expectations, responsibilities, and possibilities.

Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts on Moneycontrol.com are their own and not those of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.

Jimeet Modi
Jimeet Modi is the CEO and Founder of SAMCO Securities.
first published: Jun 8, 2025 09:53 am

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