"We may have come to the end of the interest rate tightening cycle. Rates, however, must remain on hold for now...No room for a rate cut anytime soon," Crisil said in a note.
The note said fall in retail inflation, which has declined from 11.2% in November to 8.1% in February, has been entirely driven by low vegetable prices, with hardly any downward adjustment in core CPI inflation.
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Additionally, the data of the past eight years shows that there were supply side shocks on the food front for seven of those years in spite of the monsoon being normal.
"Thus, while the shock to vegetable prices may have abated, the possibility of another idiosyncratic shock to food prices remains high, even if monsoons this year are normal and demand-side pressures remain relatively low," it said.
Rajan will announce the monetary policy tomorrow and expectations of a status quo are rising ever since the official data on consumer price inflation for February pointed to a cool down to 8.1%.
The number is much closer to the RBI target of getting it to 8% by January 2015, but worries like unseasonal rains can make the situation tricky.
Rajan, who took charge last September, has built a reputation to surprise the markets. He raised the rates at his first policy announcement, rightly foreseeing a pressure on the inflation front and increased it again--the third time since he took charge--in January when the market was expecting a pause.