At a time when headline inflation has been moderating, most were expecting the central bank to take a firmer stance on growth.
What they got instead was what some privately describe as mere 'tokenism'.
Venugopal Dhoot, chairman & managing director, Videocon Industries, said, "It would have helped had the central bank cut the repo rate. Lending rates would have come down, giving a boost to growth."
This sentiment was echoed by Harsh Mariwala, chairman & managing director, Marico Ltd, "The RBI is cautiously optimistic, which is why a CRR cut rather than a repo cut."
Rajeev Talwar, group executive director, DLF, minced no words by saying that the central bank should have acted with utmost speed.
"It would have boosted consumer confidence which is very essential to drive growth. RBI's extreme cautiousness is discouraging. Instead of asking government to kick-start reforms, the central bank needs to be serious about boosting growth. What are they waiting for?"
Kishore Biyani, chief executive officer, Future Group, said: "A cut in the repo rate would have been a great leap forward.
"That was the need of the hour." K Sridharan, chief financial officer, Ashok Leyland, said the need of the hour was a 50 bps cut in the repo and reverse repo rates.
Pradeep Jain, chairman of Delhi-based Parsvnath Developers, was vocal that the central bank's 'delicate balancing act' is woefully inadequate.
Some corporate chieftains remained optimistic that the much-expected cut in policy rates would happen sooner rather than later.
Ajay Chandra, managing director, Unitech, said, "A reduction in the CRR is a positive move from the RBI, as it will increase the credit-supply
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