In its 'Asia Economic Alert', the banking and asset management behemoth also said that the Reserve Bank is likely to hike the short-term lending (repo) rate by 100 basis points in 2011 with the purpose of curbing inflationary pressure.
"We expect Wholesale Price Index inflation to average 8.6 per cent year-on-year in FY12 from 9.4 per cent in FY11," it said.
The high projection is on account of the fact that costs have not yet been fully passed on to the consumers.
"Countering expectations of a moderation, inflation accelerated to (almost) 9 per cent in March 2011. . .The negative surprise owed largely to manufacturers' passing on the higher input costs to consumers, amid strong demand.
"Our analysis suggests that the cost pass through is still incomplete and both headline and core WPI inflation will accelerate further in the first half of FY12 before retreating in the second half," it said.
The report also added that while output prices have risen sharply, margins continue to remain under pressure.
This is specially so in case of tea and coffee, manmade fibres, wood products, machinery, transport equipments and fuel segments.
Headline inflation has been above the 8 per cent mark since February 2010.
The March numbers of 8.98 per cent was much above the government and RBI's projection of 8 per cent.
"We are pencilling in 100 basis points of additional repo interest rate hikes in 2011, taking the terminal rate to 7.75 per cent," Nomura said, without, however, making any projections about the RBI's short-term borrowing (reverse repo) rates.
RBI has already hiked the key-policy rates eight times since March 2010. Experts have said the central bank is likely to go for another mild hike at its next quarterly review on May 3
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