"In his maiden policy review, Rajan stressed on inflation control as his priority. With inflation now out of RBI's comfort zone for four months in a row, we expect a 0.25 per cent repo rate hike," rating agency Crisil said in a note.
According to the research arm of the country's largest lender State Bank of India, with stability in the currency, Rajan is likely to lower the marginal standing facility rate, at which the RBI lends to the banks, once the lenders exhaust their overnight repo borrowing limits.
"We expect repo hike of 0.25 per cent and MSF downward recalibration of 0.25 per cent," it said in a note.
Official data released yesterday showed wholesale price inflation for the the month of September inching up to 6.46 per cent from 6.10 per cent for August.
The rupee had fallen to an all-time low of 68.85 against the dollar in late August, but has recovered since then on the back of steps taken by the government and the RBI.
It was trading at 61.53 this afternoon.
In spite of huge expectations from him to address the concerns on the country's sagging growth -- the June quarter growth fell to a four-year low of 4.4 per cent -- Rajan increased the repo rate by 0.25 per cent, citing pressure on the inflation front, at his maiden policy review on September 20.
He had, however, cut the MSF rate by 0.50 per cent and followed it up with a similar 0.50
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