India Inc hopes RBI will resume rate cut cycle after Budget

Disappointed by RBI's decision to keep interest rates unchanged, India Inc on Tuesday said there is a need to cut the rates by 75 basis points in remaining months of 2015 and hoped for monetary easing after Union Budget.

New Delhi: With RBI maintaining a status quo, India Inc on Tuesday hoped the "rate cut cycle" will resume post Budget and asked the government and the central bank to nudge lenders to lower rates to bring back the investment momentum.

After a surprise 0.25 percent reduction in repo rate on January 15, the RBI on Tuesday left the interest rate at 7.75 percent in its bi-monthly monetary policy.

CII President Ajay S Shriram said a modest 0.25 percent rate cut would have further lifted sentiments and assured the markets that the monetary easing cycle is on course which would be followed by further cuts in rates during the year.

He said the CII is hopeful that the RBI would resume its accommodative monetary policy stance in the next policy review and work in tandem with the government to bring back the investment momentum.

In a statement, industry body FICCI said there was a need for a cut of at least another 75 basis points during 2015 and its transmission by the banks to industry in the form of lower lending rates to boost growth on a sustainable basis.

"...The RBI is clearly now looking at the fiscal consolidation measures that would be announced in the upcoming budget. Given that the government is committed to maintaining fiscal prudence, we are hopeful that the repo rate cut cycle would be resumed after the presentation of the Union Budget for 2015-16," FICCI President Jyotsna Suri said.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley is scheduled to present the first full-fledged budget of the new government on February 28.

Assocham, President, Rana Kapoor said the government, if not the RBI, should nudge banks to transmit lower interest rates which have already taken place.

"Whichever way it is possible, the cost of capital must come down for the entrepreneurs and the interest rate must also be down for the consumer to revive the demand," he said.

Commenting on the policy, Alok B Shriram, President of PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry said though, repo rate cut was expected, the 0.50 percent cut in SLR is welcome and is expected to enhance banking sector liquidity.

Shashwat Sharma, Partner- Financial Services, KPMG in India appreciated RBI's "watchful approach" on awaiting structural changes by the government in the domestic economy before announcing further interest rate cuts.

Meanwhile, engineering exporters' body EEPC said costs are going to be key but interest rates do not support exporters.

"The least the banks can do is to transmit the cut in interest rates already announced by the RBI earlier. Change in the dispensation of export finance will help only if rates are brought down," EEPC Chairman Anupam Shah said.

Chairman and MD of CBRE South Asia Anshuman Magazine, said the monetary policy was largely expected by the industry, given that the RBI had already initiated rates cut in January. He said it was a prudent move on the part of the central bank to wait and watch for the market to react to the current positive macro-economic climate in the country.

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