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SBI Cuts Loan Rates After RBI Move, EMIs Set to Ease - State Bank of India cuts lending rates by up to 25 bps following RBI’s repo rate reduction, lowering EMIs for home, auto, personal, and...

SBI Cuts Loan Rates After RBI Move, EMIs Set to Ease
wiobs.com/sbi-cuts-loa...
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Operation Frontload: RBI Fires All Weapons, Then Calls For Peace RBI unleashed a surprise rate-and-liquidity barrage, then changed stance to neutral. Was this pre-emption, or a response to unseen threats?

2/2 BasisPoint Groupthink calls it what it is: Operation Frontload.

Read: basispointinsight.com/Story/Home/o...

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RBI cuts interest rates by bigger-than-expected 50 bps; shifts to ‘neutral’ Investing.com-- The Reserve Bank of India cut interest rates by a bigger-than-expected margin on Friday, citing expectations for a sustained cooling in inflation and growing risks to Indian economic growth. RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra also said that the bank had now shifted its stance to ‘neutral’ from ‘accommodative,’ citing heightened global economic uncertainty. Malhotra also cut the RBI’s consumer price index inflation outlook for the current fiscal year. The RBI cut its benchmark policy repo rate by 50 basis points to 5.5% from 6.0%, more than market expectations for a 25 bps. The cut was the RBI’s third reduction after two 25 bps cuts earlier in the year, bringing its total rate cuts this year to a full 1%. The RBI also cut its cash reserve ratio-- which dictates the amount of cash to be held as reserves by local banks-- by 100 bps to 3% from 4%. The cut was aimed largely at supporting local liquidity conditions. Speaking during a livestream, Malhotra said the central bank was front-loading its monetary easing in the face of heightened global economic uncertainty. The RBI’s outsized cut comes as CPI inflation moderated sharply in March and April, slipping well below the RBI’s 4% annual target. Malhotra said the RBI now expects CPI inflation at 3.7% in fiscal 2026, down from its prior forecast of 4%. Malhotra maintained the RBI’s fiscal 2026 GDP forecast held at 6.5%. While the RBI was widely expected to cut rates on Friday, the outsized, 50 bps cut indicates increased caution over growth and inflation in the central bank. Malhotra flagged resilience in the Indian economy despite heightened uncertainty over U.S. trade tariffs, noting that March quarter gross domestic product data blew past expectations. But he noted that growth risks still remained in the coming quarter. The bigger cut caught Indian markets off guard, with the rupee weakening slightly after the move. India’s Nifty 50 stock index also reversed initial losses to trade mildly positive after the decision.

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RBI to cut rates again on April 9, then just once more in August- Reuters poll By Vivek Mishra and Pranoy Krishna BENGALURU (Reuters) - The Reserve Bank of India (NSE:BOI) will cut interest rates at a second straight meeting on April 9, with just one more cut expected in August, which would mark the shortest easing cycle on record, a Reuters poll of economists found. With inflation in India easing to a seven-month low of 3.61% in February and the economy forecast to grow at 6.4% this fiscal year, the weakest in four years, the central bank has room to cut rates further. A strong majority of economists, 54 of 60 in the March 18-27 Reuters poll, expected the RBI to cut its benchmark repo rate by 25 basis points to 6.00% at the conclusion of its April 7-9 meeting. One respondent predicted a 50 basis point cut, while the remaining five expected no change. "There are not many strong growth drivers going into fiscal year 2026...they (RBI) need to sustain their support to growth. Inflation has also created a lot of room for them to ease. So I think they should utilise that space and sort of recalibrate monetary policy," said Dhiraj Nim, economist at ANZ. "They have injected liquidity, so that’s covering some part of the liquidity deficit, that’s good. But I think the rates also need to fall now because we have seen a palpable slowdown in consumption and investment and the real rates need to adjust from that perspective." The RBI has injected about $64 billion of rupees into the banking system over the last few months to increase money supply, which economists said was needed for rate cuts to work their way into the broader economy. However, several economists in the poll said it would take a few more months for that to happen. "If transmission needs to happen, especially in a rate-cutting cycle, (banking sector) liquidity needs to be on the positive side," said Indranil Pan, chief economist at Yes Bank (NSE:YESB). Pan added liquidity will start to improve in the upcoming financial year, beginning in April 2025, as government expenditures also pick up pace. SHALLOWEST RATE-CUT CYCLE EVER Median forecasts in the poll showed the RBI will keep interest rates at 6.00% in the June 4-6 meeting. However, a narrow majority of economists, 29 of 49, expected the interest rate to fall to 5.75% in the August meeting, a view unchanged from last month. This is expected to be followed by a prolonged pause until at least the first half of next year. With a total of 75 basis points in rate cuts this cycle, it will be the shortest easing cycle since early 2000, when the RBI began using the repo rate as its main policy tool. "I think this is going to be a shallow rate cut cycle to begin with...Depending on what happens on the global front, drags of capital outflows and what the U.S. Fed does," said Sakshi Gupta, principal economist at HDFC bank. "We were always of the view that there will be a maximum of three rate cuts that the RBI will deliver...Beyond the cut in April, we remain divided between June and August."

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