City
Epaper

RBI may explore other liquidity tools like open market operations (OMOs) and foreign exchange (FX) swaps instead of rate cut: Report

By ANI | Updated: December 5, 2024 09:40 IST

New Delhi [India], December 5 : The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may keep the current policy rates unchanged ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], December 5 : The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may keep the current policy rates unchanged in the ongoing Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, according to a report by the Union Bank of India.

As per the report, RBI is unlikely to announce a cash reserve ratio (CRR) cut to improve liquidity. A CRR cut is viewed as a strong policy signal that might indicate inflation is under control and growth concerns are severe.

The report predicts that the first rate cut of 25 basis points (bps) might take place in February 2025, followed by another cut in April 2025.

The report also noted that instead of a rate cut the central bank may explore other liquidity tools such as open market operations (OMOs) and foreign exchange (FX) swaps to manage liquidity in the market for balancing the inflation and growth.

It said "we do expect the RBI to announce use of permanent liquidity tools apart from fine-tuning operations. Core liquidity is likely to switch into sustained deficit at least by Q4 FY25 unless FX outflows measures (totalling more than USD 25bn in last two months) reverse".

However, the report also mentioned that the RBI rate cut timeline may shift if global market volatility continues after Donald Trump assumes office as US President on January 20, 2025.

The report pointed out that the MPC faces a challenging situation with recent GDP data for the second quarter of FY25 revealing a sharp slowdown in economic growth, coming in significantly below the MPC's estimates of 7 per cent.

At the same time, inflation remains above the upper limit of the RBI's target range of 4 per cent (+/-2 per cent) as of October 2024. Adding to these challenges are sharp foreign exchange losses, driven by heightened global market volatility.

The report also highlighted the growing liquidity deficit in the financial system. Core liquidity is expected to remain in deficit by the fourth quarter of FY25 unless foreign exchange outflows, which have exceeded $25 billion over the past two months, reverse.

Overall, while growth recovery is anticipated in the latter half of FY25, the RBI's immediate challenge is to balance weak growth, elevated inflation, and external volatility while ensuring adequate liquidity in the system.

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

InternationalTrinidad and Tobago PM congratulates PM Modi, BJP on 'historic' West Bengal poll victory

National"Shots fired at point-blank range": Eyewitness to killing of Suvendu Adhikari's aide says attack appeared "pre-planned"

InternationalEAM pays tribute at 'Monument for the Fallen Heroes' in Suriname's Mariënburg, recalls Girmitya struggle

NationalCJI Surya Kant welcomes Centre's move to raise Supreme Court judges' strength to 38

NationalDelhi HC refuses bail to maulvi accused of sexually assaulting minor girl

Business Realted Stories

BusinessSonowal sets July deadline for completing Maritime Heritage Complex at Lothal

BusinessAadhaar App crosses 21 million downloads in three months: Govt

BusinessSitharaman, Vietnam Finance Minister exchange views on global economy, evolving geopolitical challenges

BusinessForeign Exchange Management Regulations aim to rationalise authorisation framework: RBI

BusinessGreaves Cotton's Q4 profit dips 6 pc to Rs 23 crore