The Reserve Bank of India today released its review of the macroeconomic and
monetary developments which serves as a background to the Third Quarter review of
Monetary Policy 2009-10 being announced tomorrow, January 29th, 2010.
Some of the Key Highlights of the documents which we believe will set the tone of the
monetary policy are:
- The IMF, in its January 2010 update, has revised significantly the global growth outlook for 2010 (from the earlier projected 3.1 per cent to 3.9 per cent). Recovery in advanced economies is, however, expected to remain sluggish, while economic activity in emerging market economies (EMEs) and developing economies could expand vigorously, driven by domestic demand
- The pace and shape of recovery continue to remain uncertain. By far the biggest anxiety is about the recovery losing momentum once the props of fiscal stimulus and monetary accommodation are withdrawn
- Emerging economies, which are already on the recovery path, face various challenges from capital flows, potential inflationary pressures and credit revival
- According to the first advance estimates, production of kharif food grains and oilseeds is expected to decline by about 16 per cent over the previous year
- Corporate performance data up to the second quarter of 2009-10 indicate that despite the persistence of dampened (y-on-y) growth in sales, sequential quarterly growth remained positive. In the third quarter of 2009-10, partial data indicate significant (Y-o-Y) growth in sales.
- Pattern of capital flows, pace of the recovery in demand for credit from the private sector and the fiscal stance would influence the monetary and liquidity conditions in the near term
- Inflation emerged as a major concern during the third quarter, dominated by significant supply factors.
- In December 2009, there have been signs of emergence of generalized inflation
- While anchoring inflation expectations becomes important in such a situation, addressing supply constraints would be critical for enhancing the effectiveness of any anti-inflationary policy measures
- In view of the dominance of food price inflation, balancing the policy needs of supporting durable return to the high growth path while avoiding a situation of generalized increase in inflation through monetary policy actions has emerged as a delicate challenge for the Reserve Bank
- The upside prospects for further acceleration in growth in the near term derive support from several factors, including as per the Reserve Bank’s business expectations survey as well as similar surveys of other agencies
- According to the Reserve Bank’s Professional Forecasters Survey conducted in December 2009, the outlook for 2009-10 growth has been revised upwards from 6.0 per cent to 6.9 per cent
- The outlook for inflation will be conditioned by the upside risks in terms of persistence of supply side pressures in the near term and possible return of purchasing power because of higher growth
- The growth and inflation mix for India is increasingly becoming asymmetric vis-à-vis the pattern in other G-20 countries. The possibility of surges in capital inflows and the associated domestic liquidity conditions may also affect inflationary expectations, besides the impact of the rebound in international commodity prices in response to global recovery
- With a stronger recovery in India, the risk of food price inflation causing generalized inflation cannot be ignored
Analysis:
The RBI review clearly highlights the fact that the growth is no more a concern and is on apositive trajectory, however clearly states inflation as a big concern. Thus we believe that tocurb this inflation demon RBI may go against the general street consensus and increase the key repo and reverse repo rate by around 50 bps. (The CRR hike of at least 50 bps is almost inevitable).
In the last policy too, RBI did removed some unconventional measures and tightened prudential norms and said that “This is the beginning of the phase of monetary reversal”.
Thus we strongly believe that this quarter a reversal is highly likely on the cards and one should avoid investment (can go short) in rate sensitive sectors like Banking, Real Estate, Automobile and Capital Goods and move towards defensives like FMCG and Pharma (long).
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