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RBI monetary review: An uneventful policy, but an eventful press conference?

There is lots to watch in RBI’s statement and in the accompanying monetary policy report, which will be released by the central bank on Thursday.

April 05, 2018 / 08:38 IST
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Latha Venkatesh Moneycontrol News

Bond yields have seen so much volatility in recent weeks that market men don’t expect and don’t even want an eventful policy. After starting 2018 at below 7.1 percent, 10-year bond yields shot up to 7.4 percent on January 15 after the RBI deputy governor ticked off banks for thoughtless investment and zero risk management.

Yields further climbed to 7.6 percent by early February on fears of a large fiscal deficit based on overstated tax collections and under–provided expenditure. Rising crude prices pulled yields to 7.75 percent by early March. And then, quite unexpectedly, on March 26, yields crashed to 7.3 percent on the government cutting its first half borrowing by 22 percent versus year ago levels. The RBI, again, unexpectedly, met the government half way by allowing easier provisioning for banks on bond losses.

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After immense drama, possibly no side is interested in an “eventful” monetary policy. Also the noise in global trade and the reality of rate hikes warrant a cautious approach. Under the circumstances a no-action policy is what the doctor ordered and that’s what the patient may get.

But there is much to watch in RBI’s statement and in the accompanying monetary policy report. The central bank's current inflation forecast for the first half of this year is 5.1 percent-5.6 percent and for the second half is 4.5-4.6 percent. But this was probably predicated on crude at $55/barrel. Now if the assumption is upped to $65, will the trajectory change? As well, the RBI and the markets are still guessing what the minimum support price for key crops is likely to be. If the government intends to pay farmers the full difference between the market price and 1.5X their cost of production, the fiscal deficit too could be higher.