Bank of America Merill Lynch said the Monetary Policy Committee's (MPC) concerns on inflation are dissolving given the cut in its outlook to 3.5-4.5 per cent band in H2FY17 as against 5 per cent earlier, and expected a rate cut at the next review on August 2 if the rains are good.
Economists at Singaporean lender DBS said the "dovish policy stance renews the possibility of more monetary easing" and forecast a cut of up to 0.50 per cent by March 2018 as against its earlier expectation of no cuts.
However, analysts at Japanese brokerage Nomura and British brokerage HSBC felt otherwise.
"The RBI has rightly looked through the current period of low inflation. Our longer-term models are still predicting a return of inflation to pre-demonetisation levels next year and household inflation expectations have barely budged," Nomura said, adding it expects no cuts in 2017.
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"We continue to expect a prolonged pause with risks of a rate cut in August," HSBC said.
"April inflation print and revised growth estimates have certainly raised difficult policy questions. We will watch carefully over next few months the incoming data on inflation as well as the indicators of real economic activity. I expect that we will remain adequately state contingent and if data so warrant, act for a broader accommodation through the interest rate policy," deputy governor Viral Acharya had told reporters.
HSBC said it will be tracking the early rains and reservoir levels, daily food prices, and details in the MPC minutes to gauge the future course of the action.
BofAML said the August 2 cut it expects will signal a lending rate cut to banks before the busy industrial season sets in October.
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