Big Deal: Decoding digital currency

In this era of digital revolution, Big Deal is going to focus on digital currency and how it is picking up pace. Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has also introduced the concept of Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC). Cyril Shroff, Managing Partner at Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, and Neeraj Gambhir, Group Executive at Axis Bank, discuss whether it will be a game-changer and what the impact will be on the transactions as well as capital management by all participants in the economy.

For the entire discussion, watch the accompanying video

Strong USD aggravated rupee decline in Q4FY21: Axis Bank

Rupee decline was partly aggravated this year in Q4 by a strong dollar, and part depreciation was cyclical, said Neeraj Gambhir, president of head treasury and markets at Axis Bank. Gambhir also said that some of the currency depreciation is cyclical.

The rupee fell for the sixth straight session and settled 32 paise down at 75.05 against the US dollar on Monday amid a lackluster trend in the domestic equities ahead of the release of key macro-economic data. Moreover, rising crude oil prices, foreign fund outflows, and spiking COVID-19 cases weighed on the domestic currency.

Speaking in an interview with CNBC-TV18, he said, “Some of it (the decline) is cyclical because typically the last quarter of the fiscal year is very heavy in terms of inflows and we see that reflected in the way rupee behaves during January-March period. This year it has been further aggravated by the fact that the dollar has been recently strong across most of the emerging market currencies and that’s getting reflected in the rupee as well.”

However, said Gambhir, I don’t see the rupee declining to below Rs 75.50-76 to the dollar. “I do not expect too much of depreciation in the rupee. We should see about Rs 75.50-76 level,” he said.

For entire interview, watch the video

RBI’s first policy decision of FY22; experts discuss inflation, bond market, deposit rates

rbi building

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) kept the repo rate unchanged in the first bi-monthly monetary policy meet for the financial year 2021-22. With no change this time as well, the repo rate currently stands at 4 percent. The reverse repo rate has been maintained at 3.35 percent.

In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Ananth Narayan, professor at SP Jain Institute of Management and Research (SPJIMR); Neeraj Gambhir, president, head-treasury & markets at Axis Bank; Rahul Bajoria, chief India economist at Barclays; Pronab Sen, former chief statistician; and Ashwini Kumar Tewari, MD of State Bank of India (SBI); discussed at length the RBI’s expected interventions in the bond market.

Gambhir said, “It is as dovish a policy as it can get in the current circumstances and the RBI has gone the extra mile as far as reassuring the market is concerned, the fact that they will be there to support both the bond market as well as the foreign exchange (FX) market.”

Meanwhile, Bajoria said, “The RBI has tried to balance the short-term interest of the heightened uncertainty around growth with giving assurance on the liquidity front.”

Narayan said that the RBI is trying to manage the conflicting environment. “The governor repeatedly said during the press conference that RBI is trying to manage conflicting targets and requirements and that’s the real dilemma in the medium-term for the RBI.”

According to Tewari, there is not going to be any reduction in deposit rates. “I do not think we are going to see any reduction in deposit rates; they have already bottomed out in my view. Inflation expectations or inflation – where it stands and the projections as have been given; I think there is no case for a reduction in deposit rates,” he said.

For entire discussion, watch the video

 5 Minutes Read

RBI Policy: Veteran bankers say CRR on expected lines as RBI sticks to calendar

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

Neeraj Gambhir, President, Head-Treasury and Markets of Axis Bank, SS Mallikarjuna Rao, MD and CEO of Punjab National Bank and Ashwani Bhatia, MD of State Bank of India (SBI) shared their readings and outlook on the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) monetary policy.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) announced its monetary policy on Friday after a three-day policy meet. The Central Bank held the repo rate at 4 percent and kept the stance ‘accommodative’, in the first policy after Budget 2021.

Neeraj Gambhir, President, Head-Treasury and Markets of Axis Bank, SS Mallikarjuna Rao, MD and CEO of Punjab National Bank and Ashwani Bhatia, MD of State Bank of India (SBI) shared their readings and outlook going forward.

SBI’s MD said, “RBI won’t change the policy just because the market is expecting it. So it is sticking to its calendar. I don’t see anything wrong in it. I guess the market was expecting that it will be pushed forward by six months or a year. Once RBI gives guidance, it sticks to it.”

“The increase in cash reserve ratio (CRR) is expected. Originally when it was announced, it was applicable only to March now they have given further window for reduction over a period of time. So it is an advantage policy consistency for us. More statutory liquidity ratio (SLR) related announcement and CRR related announcement is in good line so that we can plan accordingly for adhering to the lower levels over a period of time,” said Mallikarjuna Rao.

“Even TLTRO on-tap for covering non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) is a good measure. So it will be an opportunity for lending towards them to tap the market,” Rao added.

“The market is somewhat nervous about how this large borrowing program is going to get absorbed and what kind of support from RBI will be required going forward and whether that support will be forthcoming. That is what is getting reflected in the price,” said Gambhir.

For more, watch the video…

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

Next Article

Shanghai residents turn to NFTs to record COVID lockdown, combat censorship

LIVE TV

today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
Quiz
Powered by
Are you a Crypto Head? It’s time to prove it!
10 Questions · 5 Minutes
Start Quiz Now
Win WRX (WazirX token) worth Rs. 1500.
Question 1 of 5

What coins do you think will be valuable over next 3 years?

Answer Anonymously

Should Elon Musk be able to buy Twitter?

Budget 2021: Any discussion on bond index inclusion could be positive, says Citi’s Samiran Chakraborty

In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Samiran Chakraborty, Chief Economist at Citi and Neeraj Gambhir, President, Head-Treasury & Markets at Axis Bank shared their expectations from Nirmala Sitharaman’s Union Budget.

On bond index front, Chakraborty said, “Any discussion or any guidance on the timeline on the bond index inclusion for India could be a big positive for investors.”

Meanwhile, Gambhir expects next year to be a year of normalisation of policy.

For entire discussion, watch the video

Stay tuned with all the live action and updates with our Budget 2021 Live blog.

 For full coverage on Budget 2021, click here

 5 Minutes Read

Open market ops in state debt papers should cool yields: Axis Bank

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

SDLs are going through the roof at about 100 basis points (bps) right now, and hopefully that will come down, said Neeraj Gambhir, President, Head Treasury and Markets at Axis Bank in an interview to CNBC-TV18. He said this will have implications for the bond market as a whole.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in its monetary policy on Friday, announced that it will conduct open market operations (OMOs) in state development loans (SDLs) to narrow the differential in their yields compared to those of government securities (G-Secs).

SDLs are going through the roof at about 100 basis points (bps) right now, and hopefully that will come down, said Neeraj Gambhir, President, Head Treasury and Markets at Axis Bank in an interview to CNBC-TV18. He said this will have implications for the bond market as a whole.

A bit of fiscal stimulus was expected but the government has constraints, Gambhir said.

The RBI was stepping up in a big way to make sure that on the monetary front and on the interest rate front, things continued to be pro-growth he said.

On the RBI’s move to tweak the risk weights for housing loans, Gambhir said it was to be seen whether there was large ticket home loan demand.

Bank’s exposure to non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) have gone up significantly over the last six-nine months, he said.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

Next Article

Shanghai residents turn to NFTs to record COVID lockdown, combat censorship

LIVE TV

today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
Quiz
Powered by
Are you a Crypto Head? It’s time to prove it!
10 Questions · 5 Minutes
Start Quiz Now
Win WRX (WazirX token) worth Rs. 1500.
Question 1 of 5

What coins do you think will be valuable over next 3 years?

Answer Anonymously

Should Elon Musk be able to buy Twitter?

Bond yield surge is a cause for concern, says Axis Bank’s Neeraj Gambhir

The yield on the 10-year bond came within touching distance of six quarter mark as bond dealers worried about possible lack of rate cuts from RBI going by the tone of the minutes of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC). The lack of any support from Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in the form of a bond purchase also worried banks and bond buyers.

In an interview with CNBC-TV18, Neeraj Gambhir, head-treasury at Axis Bank spoke at length about where these are headed and whether the RBI by just one announcement can quieten the market.

Gambhir said that bond yield surge is a cause for concern. He further said that we are seeing a large amount of supply that the market has to deal with.

According to him, pressure on bonds may continue for some time and a lot will depend on what RBI’s move on bond prices is, he added.

The Reserve Bank of India not intervening so far indicates they are comfortable with current yields, added Gambhir.

 5 Minutes Read

RBI Monetary Policy: Economists decode the actions and its impact on economy

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

What we heard on the fiscal front yesterday was perhaps just the start and what we got from the monetary policy in one fell swoop gives a lot of chance for the financial system to actually evaluate all the possibilities and make their plans, said Chief India Economist at HSBC.

A day after the Modi government unveiled its Rs 1.7 lakh crore relief package, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has fired its big bazooka to mitigate the impact the COVID-19 outbreak is having on the economy.

The RBI Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) cut repo rate by 75 basis points to 4.40 percent. It was the first time the MPC met outside its bi-monthly meeting calendar. It also cut cash reserve ratio (CRR) by 100 basis points to 3 percent. Further, the RBI announced a three month-moratorium on all instalments due on term loans.

This includes credit card dues as well. This means people paying EMIs for home loans, auto loans, etc. could get some relief. On working capital loans, there’s now a 3-month deferment on the interest component. This means that on the fourth month, the interest accrued over these 3 months will have to be paid.

Experts decode RBI actions and way ahead for the economy

V Srinivasan a veteran banker and an independent market expert

“This liquidity infusion, the moratorium, the targeted LTRO — all these were necessary steps to buy us some time during this lock down period. Clearly, there is lot of pain which everyone is going through and this is the much needed palliative. But again this is not going to sort of solve the problem once we get out of lockdown. More needs to be done probably on fiscal side to try and make sure that whatever we have lost during the lockdown somehow will sort of gain momentum and get back on its feet without any hiccup and that is going to be the challenge here.”

Neeraj Gambhir, President of Axis Bank

“In a lot of sectors where the cash flows problems were building up or were likely to build up, there was this expectation that if the corporate don’t end up paying in time and the cash flows were under challenge, there could be potentially defaults and those defaults will lead to banks becoming risk-averse. Now to the extent that this allows banks to sort of give a relief to these corporates, it addresses to some extent the risk-aversion issue.”

Indranil Pan, chief economist at IDFC Bank

“The first attempt of the RBI more than the rate cut was to free up the logjam that was getting created in the financial system. Going forward as you say that — if after three months as the things become more or less business as usual and the overall risk of spread of the COVID-19 reduces significantly. specially in India. then the bazooka has to be actually brought out from the fiscal side of the picture and the fiscal has to work its way towards reviving the demand and then only you can get business as usual at least what we were seeing around the January and the February period.”

“Even if the risk of the COVID-19 ends this is not the end of the story. The turnaround will be quite adverse and at that point in time it has to be the fiscal, which has to push significantly forward because the scope in terms of further reduction in monetary policy given that the fiscal is loose is getting a little easy at this point in time.”

Pranjul Bhandari, Chief India Economist at HSBC

“What we heard on the fiscal front yesterday was perhaps just the start, even in humanitarian way we may eventually need much more and then perhaps come to other parts of the economy like small businesses and so on. This is just the start at this point.”

“What I liked about today’s monetary policy’s decision was that everything came together in one fell swoop. This gives a lot of chance for the financial system to actually evaluate all the possibilities and make their plans. On the other hand fiscal is coming in a most staggered way, so that is sort of one difference between the policy reaction between the government and the central bank that we are seeing right now.”

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

Next Article

Shanghai residents turn to NFTs to record COVID lockdown, combat censorship

LIVE TV

today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
Quiz
Powered by
Are you a Crypto Head? It’s time to prove it!
10 Questions · 5 Minutes
Start Quiz Now
Win WRX (WazirX token) worth Rs. 1500.
Question 1 of 5

What coins do you think will be valuable over next 3 years?

Answer Anonymously

Should Elon Musk be able to buy Twitter?

 5 Minutes Read

Rate cut needed to soothe market nerves; need more fiscal measures to ensure financial stability, say experts

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

Rate cuts cannot revive the economy and cannot bring demand at this point in time. The point is that we are not trying to address the economy. Of course the economy requires other steps, largely fiscal to take care at this point in time, said Ananth Narayan, professor at SPJIMR.

With the markets significantly down, the already slowing economy futher getting impacted by the coronavirus scare, what is it that the country’s central bank and central government can do to help better the situation and more importantly what steps need to be taken to tackle the finance dislocation that is underway in the debt markets is the big question.

To discuss this in detail and get answers to few of the questions, CNBC-TV18 spoke with Ananth Narayan, professor at SPJIMR; market expert V Srinivasan and Neeraj Gambhir, president and head-treasury at Axis Bank.

Gambhir said the market has been asking for a rate cut for a while. The expectations have been built-up. The MPC did not deliver it the last time and there was a disappointment around this. “We do need at least a 50 basis points cut, if not more. This is just to calm the nerves in the market and say that this was expected, this is delivered and the RBI is watching and acting as required,” he added.

“The open market operation of Rs 10,000 crore is quite small. We need a commitment to do more open market operations over the period of next 5-7 weeks as this problem persists and a commitment to say that if required we will do more,” said Gambhir, adding that we don’t need liquidity from central bank because there is plenty of liquidity around.

“Therefore, this open market operations is not to take care of the liquidity aspect of the system. The open market operations is to provide a bid in the market as far as government bond market is concerned, to make sure that the rates do not fly at this point in time and give the confidence to the market,” he further added.

Srinivasan said liquidity is not reaching the pockets where it is most needed. “So you need to address pockets which need liquidity right now and try and provide direct assistance and not provide system liquidity because when you are providing liquidity to the system, the system liquidity is abundant but it is not flowing through the pipe to people who need it,” he added.

Speaking about rate cut and liquidity measures, Narayan said, “Rate cuts cannot revive the economy and cannot bring demand at this point in time. The point is that we are not trying to address the economy. Of course the economy requires other steps, largely fiscal to take care at this point in time.”

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

Next Article

Shanghai residents turn to NFTs to record COVID lockdown, combat censorship

LIVE TV

today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
Quiz
Powered by
Are you a Crypto Head? It’s time to prove it!
10 Questions · 5 Minutes
Start Quiz Now
Win WRX (WazirX token) worth Rs. 1500.
Question 1 of 5

What coins do you think will be valuable over next 3 years?

Answer Anonymously

Should Elon Musk be able to buy Twitter?

RBI Monetary Policy: Expect more rate cuts going forward, says Sajjid Chinoy of JPMorgan

Reserve Bank of India

The Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) cut its key interest rate for the fourth successive time, reducing the repo rate by 35 basis points to 5.4 percent, to get the economy off its sickbed.

The central bank lowered the FY20 GDP growth target to 6.9 percent from 7 percent. Eminent bankers and economists, in an interview with CNBC-TV18, discussed the policy in detail.

Neeraj Gambhir, President and Head of Treasury and markets at Axis Bank said, “The size of the rate cut, which is larger than the market expected and the fact that we already have about Rs 2 lakh crore surplus in the system and the fact that there is quite a bit of assurance about providing liquidity as and when required, I think we should now start seeing some kind of transmission to happen going forward.”

PK Gupta,  Managing Director of State Bank of India, said, “As the governor himself mentioned that SBI has taken a lot of steps, one of the things which we did was that we linked quite a sizeable portion of the lending book also to the RBI repo rate. On that book already, 50 bps cut has happened and today’s cut of 35 bps will also get transmitted from October 1, so there is effectively 85 bps cut that happens there.”

Kaushik Das, the chief economist at Deutsche Bank, said, “The way I see the policy, the way they have framed it and talked about it, growth being the biggest priority. It’s very clear that on the fiscal side you do not have much space and the gross borrowing is pretty high.”

“What we heard on August 6th is probably sovereign bond issuances may not happen in this financial year. So we will have to wait and see for that and then the gross borrowing remains high in the local market. Therefore, we wouldn’t expect the fiscal deficit to be increased and trying to support growth. So most of this heavy lifting will have to be done by monetary policy and reforms together,” said Das.

Shanti Ekambaram, President-Consumer Banking at Kotak Mahindra Bank, said, “From March this year you have seen the deposit rates come down and the marginal cost of funds based lending rate (MCLR) also reducing and transmission happening. Banks have large deposit bases which are fixed rate. As they keep getting repriced you will see the transmission increase. So you have seen transmission from March, I think you will see transmission going forward.”

“The key thing is, is the interest rate alone driving demand? The answer is no, and the auto sector is a perfect example of that. New car rates are probably at its all-time low, but you are still seeing demand so consumption has slowed down, investment has slowed down for a very long period of time. So in my mind, in addition to rate transmission which has happened and which will continue to happen, there is a bigger issue on how do you stoke the demand, is interest rate alone sufficient to stoke the demand.”

According to Sajjid Chinoy, chief India economist at JPMorgan, “RBI is worried about growth and that is going to be the main priority for them going forward. The two key takeaways from the policy are – one, inflation is going to remain below 4 percent for the next four quarters, which means that the RBI can look mainly at growth to decide monetary policy. While they did shave growth from 7 percent to 6.9 percent that is still a very aggressive estimate.”

“Our own sense is growth this year could be closer to 6.5 percent, the first quarter of the fiscal year growth will be below 6 percent. So to get anywhere close to 7 percent, you need growth to be almost 8 percent in the second half of the year which will be very hard to achieve.”

Aditya Narain, head of research- Institutional Equity at Edelweiss Securities, said, “The policy does seem to acknowledge and reflect the fact that the non-banking financial company (NBFC) crisis has stabilised. I think that is important and that has been the first step particularly because both the government and the RBI didn’t decide to come in with a big bang. I think to some extent that is a little bit of a positive.”

“The approach is clearly a very gradual one. So some of the risk-weightage relaxation, some of the expansions of bank credit into NBFCs is more a progressive move. The reduction in risk-weightage is quite meaningful in terms of the direction it is showing because what you effectively require more than just necessarily a monetary stimulus is basically a kind of fiscal stimulus and you need more risk appetite to come into the banking system which is where you will see a wider transmission of both liquidity and rates. That is a good positive move,” he added.

Talking about the impact on bond markets, Ananth Narayan, Professor at SPJIMR, said, “With regards to bond yields, it has been a bit of a buy the rumours sell the fact. The market was expecting a dovish policy when in doubt this market will tend to expect a dovish policy from his governor. I guess you are seeing a bit of a reaction now, but the overall trend I don’t think has changed as yet, we will still see a range and depending upon global factors yields will probably come down over time.”

“RBI has done more than its bit, 110 basis points of rate cut since February pre-emptively, a change in stance to accommodative, Rs 2 lakh crore of surplus banking liquidity availability all this would have been unthinkable in under the previous regime. So frankly RBI has done more,” said Narayan.