City
Epaper

India's financial conditions stable, another rate cut likely this fiscal: Crisil

By IANS | Updated: October 10, 2025 15:00 IST

New Delhi, Oct 10 India's financial conditions remained stable in September, unchanged from August, a report said on ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 10 India's financial conditions remained stable in September, unchanged from August, a report said on Friday, adding that the RBI may reduce the repo rate in its upcoming meetings.

According to Crisil’s Financial Conditions Index (FCI), factors such as marginal improvement in bank credit growth and softer lending rates, a mild rise in the equity markets supported by Goods and Services Tax (GST) rationalisation, and stable crude oil prices hold the financial sentiment strong.

Although equity markets gained on average, they traded down in the second half of the month due to the imposition of tariffs on pharmaceutical drugs by the US and the potential hit to the IT sector from an unexpected hike in H-1B visa fees.

Despite the stability, the September FCI of -0.6 was lower than the average of -0.4 seen this fiscal.

According to the report, four factors put pressure on the FCI in September: Foreign portfolio investment (FPI) outflows, a weaker rupee, a moderating surplus in systemic liquidity and rising 10-year government security (G-sec) yield.

FPIs continued to move out of equities for the third month on continued concerns about the tariffs imposed by the US. Meanwhile, net inflows in the debt market moderated mildly. The FPI outflows put pressure on the rupee, which weakened to an all-time low against the dollar, the report noted.

Amid all the factors, the RBI may reduce the repo rate in its upcoming meetings.

"We believe the Monetary Policy Committee of the RBI will cut policy rates once more this fiscal, given the external pressures on growth and benign inflation," the report said.

The imposition of tariffs by the US and a slowing global growth are expected to impact India’s exports in the second half of fiscal 2026. Elevated global uncertainty may also impact private investments.

However, factors such as soft food inflation, repo rate cuts and tax relief measures are expected to provide some cushion.

The report projected that inflation is expected to remain benign.

The GST rationalisation is likely to provide some downside to inflation, but the overall impact will depend on the extent of the pass-through. Additionally, the US Federal Reserve (Fed)’s rate cuts will aid monetary space.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalSouth Korea: Head, deputy chief of anti-corruption agency indicted over Marine death case

BusinessShelter Home Trailer: Writer-Director Kumar Neeraj's Hard-Hitting Film Creates Emotional Impact Ahead of Dec 12 Release

BusinessEuropean Clean-Air Pioneer Zonair3D Launches in India Amid Delhi's Pollution Emergency

InternationalDeath toll from Vietnam flooding rises to 98

BusinessSeoul to set up special corporation for $350 billion investment in US

Business Realted Stories

BusinessCosmic PV Power Ltd expands into the IPP market by securing INR 600 crore solar modules supply order from Zetwerk

BusinessNeutrinos Launches Venture Studio and 'Reimagining Risk' Global Startup Challenge at Bengaluru Tech Summit 2025

BusinessDigital Women Awards & Summit 2025 – Movement Celebrating Women Entrepreneurs & Innovation

BusinessIHC Director Prof K G Suresh honoured at 56th IFFI Goa

BusinessPop the 90s: The Westin Surabaya and Four Points Pakuwon Indah Welcomes 2026 with a Spectacular Live Show Featuring Project Pop