Speaking at the Business Standard Banking Round Table in Mumbai on Monday, five of the six bank chiefs said 'no' when asked whether RBI should raise rates in the second quarter review of the monetary policy on October 25.
Bankers gave three broad reasons for their view.
First, early signs of a slowdown are becoming increasingly visible, with small and medium-sized industries already feeling the stress.
Second, long-term investment demand will take a hit as confidence has taken a hard knock in the absence of policy initiatives.
And third, the underlying strong domestic demand, which has kept the India story going, may have reached a tipping point.
The central bank has increased rates 12 times in the past 18 months.
The round-table was attended by State Bank of India chairman Pratip Chaudhuri, Bank of Baroda chairman and managing director M D Mallya, ICICI Bank managing director and chief executive officer Chanda Kochhar, Axis Bank managing director and chief executive officer Shikha Sharma, Citi India chief executive officer Pramit Jhaveri and Deutsche Bank India chief executive officer Gunit Chadha.
The bankers said in case RBI decided
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