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Markets will call central bankers' bluff

Expect the equity markets to stay volatile and range bound. This market is for swing traders to make money

May 05, 2022 / 16:30 IST
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RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das (File Photo)

The Monetary Policy Committee’s out of cycle decision to hike the policy repo rate by an unconventional 40bps and the cash reserve ratio (CRR) by 50bps is not entirely surprising. After all, consumer price inflation (CPI) has been consistently running close to or over the RBI’s tolerance band for the past many months.

The decision of the RBI came a few hours after an unscheduled 25bps hike by the Royal Bank of Australia (RBA) and a few hours before the much anticipated 50bps hike by the US Federal Reserve. With this over 55 central bankers have hiked their respective policy rates in the past 10 weeks. This includes about one half of the members of G-20. Interestingly, the countries struggling with financial crises and growth like Zimbabwe (2000bps); Sri Lanka (700bps) and Pakistan (250bps) have tightened the most aggressively in the past 10 weeks. Besides Australia, the commodity exporters of Africa and Americas have also hiked the rates. Russia and Singapore are the only two notable countries that have cut policy rates since March 2022.

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Evidently, inflation is the overriding concern for most central bankers at this point in time. Even those like the US Federal Reserve and Reserve Bank of India which were insisting that inflation is transient, being a consequence of the temporary supply chain disruptions due to the pandemic, and could be surmounted by focusing on growth, are now according higher priority to price stability rather than growth. Both the Fed and RBI have hiked rates despite a palpable slowdown in the growth in recent quarters, and consensus downward revision of future growth forecasts. Obviously, the policy decisions lacked conviction and thus did not elicit the desired response from commodity, currency and bond markets.

The Fed itself blunted its attack on inflation by ruling out aggressive hikes of 75bps in the forthcoming policy meets. The RBI governor was conspicuously apologetic while making the announcement. It is pertinent to note that bonds and currency markets were already anticipating these hikes and had discounted some of the impact beforehand; these actions were mostly expected to have “signaling” value for the markets only. By communicating a weak signal both the Fed and RBI have disappointed the markets.