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Monetary Policy | MPC frontloads to play catch-up

The sharp inter-meeting repo hike of 40 bps reflects increased policy urgency with heightened inflation uncertainties and the need to do policy catch up with the Fed and other EM Asian peers. June may see another frontloaded hike of 25 bps or more, FY23 could see overall rates go up by 125 bps 

May 05, 2022 / 10:06 IST
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In an inter policy meeting, the RBI MPC on Wednesday surprised many by unanimously voting to raise the repo rate by 40 basis points (bps) to 4.4 percent. It, however, kept the stance accommodative, while focusing on withdrawing accommodation.

With March inflation print exceeding the RBI's target range materially, and the next two quarters also in line to overshoot 6 percent (April print likely around 7.5 percent), the RBI has been pressed to act sooner than later. Moreover, with inflation realities worsening, the next move will be a hike (in June), with or without stout and formal stance change. The need for formal change in stance will only occur when the policy rate is on its way to become restrictive and growth impinging. At this point, the rate increase merely reversed the 40 bps cut delivered in May 2020.

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Inflation urgency and global externalities tie RBI’s hand

The front-loaded out-of-turn rate hike only strengthened the view that urgency from the MPC end has only increased with inflation uncertainties and with the need to do policy catch up. While it could have frontloaded the hikes in April itself, we think the MPC was constrained by its own language in February where it stated the need to telegraph its action well before. The April MPC policy gave it that platform to telegraph, only to act yesterday -- just ahead of FOMC meeting which raised rates by 50bps.