RBI To Hold Key Rates, But June Hike Now Close Call: Poll

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The RBI may use the June meeting to shift its policy communication to an explicit tightening biasBengaluru: An increasing number of
economists expect the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to raise interest rates on Wednesday, a Reuters poll found, but most still think the
central bank will stay on hold and use this week's meeting to prepare for an August hike.In a snap poll of 56 economists taken after gross
domestic product data on Thursday, 26 of those respondents, or about 46 per cent, expect the RBI to take the repo rate higher at the June 6
meeting
The GDP data showed Asia's third-largest economy grew at its fastest pace in nearly two years in the January-March period.That compares with
21 of 57 economists, or about 40 per cent of them, in a poll taken before the GDP data was published."The risk has gone up, definitely, but
(we're) not convinced enough for it to happen in June," said Kunal Kundu, India economist at Societe Generale
"We still stick to August."While most economists in the latest Reuters poll expect the repo rate to remain at 6.00 per cent on Wednesday, a
majority forecast the RBI to raise it by 25 basis points to 6.25 per cent in August.The RBI may use the June meeting to shift its policy
communication to an explicit tightening bias away from the neutral bias it has held since February last year.An unexpected surge in both
inflation and economic growth rates, which confirmed India as the fastest-growing major economy, have brought forward expectations for the
next rate hike by more than a year.Just over a month ago, the RBI wasn't expected to raise rates until the second half of 2019.India's
benchmark 10-year sovereign bond yields rose to their highest in two weeks to 7.90 per cent on Monday on expectations the central bank will
have to raise interest rates to keep inflation in check.But for many, June meeting's decision is a very close call."The consensus is
expecting the RBI to keep rates on hold at the upcoming meeting
But a surge in core inflation, looser fiscal policy and rising oil prices are a concern for the MPC (Monetary Policy Committee)," noted