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Lost in transmission

Personal credit will still be the key to a credit boom if it happens, especially after the RBI backtracked on some of the tough regulatory measures that had stymied gold loans and lending to NBFCs earlier. But all of this depends on how much and how quickly rate cuts transmit through the credit system, which remains a moot question

June 09, 2025 / 14:43 IST
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Another interesting aspect is that the RBI has been reducing rates at a time when core inflation was inching up.

The size of the rate reduction may have been the big surprise from the June monetary policy, but there are some other interesting aspects as well. The shift in stance from accommodative back to neutral in less than two months, for instance. RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra’s remark that the tussle between price stability and growth was only in the short run may seem to back this.

In April when the RBI switched its stance to accommodative, it was signalling, in its own words, that only two options existed for rates going forward, status quo or downward. In June, after having delivered a 50 bp rate cut, it seemed to be shuttering down stating monetary policy is left with ‘very limited space to support growth’. Read together with its remarks that price stability was a necessary but not sufficient condition for growth, the large rate cut could then be seen as either making up for lost time or perhaps to downplay expectations for the future.

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Core, gold and inflation

The change in stance and RBI’s cautious optimism could probably rein in expectations of markets enthused by falling inflation and prospects of more reductions. Another interesting aspect is that the RBI has been reducing rates at a time when core inflation was inching up (from 3.6% in December 2024 to 4.2% in April 2025) though headline inflation was declining continuously. The irony of the situation will not be lost on those who remember that only last year there was pressure on the RBI to focus on core rather than headline inflation in an obvious attempt to get it to reduce rates.