BS Reporter in Mumbai
The Reserve Bank of India did not take any big step on inflation or growth in its monetary policy review on Monday, but the message it sent out was enough for bankers to signal an imminent cut in lending rates.
Though the 25-basis point cut in the cash reserve ratio or the proportion of deposits banks need to maintain with the Reserve Bank of India, which will infuse around Rs 17,000 crore (Rs 170 billion) into the system, is not going to do wonders for either liquidity or bank credit growth, experts say the central bank gave enough hints of policy easing in October's monetary policy review.
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Why lending rate will pinch less
Photographs: Reuters
In any case, a CRR cut is more potent than a cut in policy rates, they say.
The CRR cut comes into effect from the fortnight beginning September 22.
Following on Monday's decisions, the CRR will come down to 4.5 per cent, while the repo rate -- at which the central bank lends to the banks -- would remain unchanged at eight per cent.
For a change, the central bank was on the same page as the government.
Pointing out that the government's recent actions paved the way for a more favourable growth-inflation dynamic, the RBI said, 'monetary policy also had an important role in supporting growth revival'.
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Why lending rate will pinch less
Photographs: Reuters
The central bank, however, hastened to add the primary focus of monetary policy remained the containment of inflation and anchoring of inflation expectations.
Though India Inc termed the RBI's refusal to cut the repo rate a 'deep disappointment', bankers were far more positive. SBI Chairman Pratip Chaudhuri said it would review rates and the asset-liability committee would meet on Tuesday.
The cut, he indicated, would be in the areas of manufacturing and medium and small-scale industries.
Several public sector bank chiefs said their asset-liability committees would meet shortly on a possible rate review.
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Why lending rate will pinch less
Photographs: Reuters
ICICI Bank MD and CEO Chanda Kochhar said given the comfortable liquidity and recent reduction in deposit rates by banks, interest rates could be expected to trend downwards gradually.
However, she said banks would have to keep an eye on funding costs, given the level of CASA deposit growth. HDFC Bank Chief Economist Abheek Barua said the RBI was leaning towards a more dovish stance and was willing to support growth.
He expected a 50-75-bp cut in lending rates in the current year.
The markets were not so happy, with key stock indices paring initial gains after the policy announcement.
The Sensex gained 0.42 per cent or 78 points to close at 18,542.31, its highest finish since July 2011.
Banking stocks rallied. ICICI Bank, the top gainer on the Sensex, rose 5.39 per cent to Rs 1,060.60.
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