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RBI may take dovish stance in February policy with softer inflation

RBI will announce it's sixth bi-monthly monetary policy on February 7.

RBI may take dovish stance in February policy with softer inflation

Mumbai: With softer retail and wholesale price-based inflation, Reserve Bank of India is likely to change its policy stance to 'neutral' from 'calibrated tightening' in the February policy, says a report.

The inflation based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) eased to an 18-month low of 2.19 percent in December compared to 2.33 percent in November and 5.21 percent in December 2017.

The Wholesale Price Index (WPI)-based inflation also eased to a eigth-month low of 3.80 percent in December 2018, as against 4.64 percent in November 2018, and 3.58 percent in December 2017.

This is the fifth consecutive month that the CPI reading has been below the RBI's target of 4 percent.

"Benign headline inflation to provide a dovish tilt to monetary policy committee (MPC). Softer December CPI and WPI prints of 2.2 percent and 3.8 percent, respectively reaffirm our belief that the MPC will adopt a more dovish tone in the February meeting and change its stance to neutral from calibrated tightening," according to a Kotak research report.

RBI will announce it's sixth bi-monthly monetary policy on February 7. The report expects CPI at around 3.3 percent in March 2019.

It said concerns, however, remain about the stickiness of core inflation, especially at a time when growth is expected is slow to 6.6 percent in the second half of FY19.

"While volatile crude oil prices and concerns on fiscal slippage may warrant some caution, the seemingly structurally benign food inflation along with softening growth should help in capping the upside pressures," it said.

The report expect a 50 basis points of rate cut in the first half of 2019.

In the previous monetary policy announced in December, RBI kept the repo rate unchanged at 6.5 percent.