The latter will allow the RBI to be non-committal on the future course of action, retaining the flexibility to react to the evolving inflation trajectory, said DBS, a leading Asian bank with focus on further expanding in India.
"We expect a 25 basis points (0.25 per cent) cut on August 2, with no change in their neutral stance," said DBS in today's economic report.
Domestic factors are likely to be given a higher weightage in swaying the decision, compared to global factors, it said.
"While the sharp drop in June CPI to 1.5 per cent year on year is partly amplified by base effects, we do not expect the second half of the year rebound to be as sharp as feared," said DBS.
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Food prices have corrected sharply, in particular the routinely volatile pulses and vegetables.
Structural factors and production trends signal that food inflation should settle around 2-3 per cent over the next few months, according to the bank.
Beyond the mechanical uplift from housing rent allowance changes, concerns over second round effects are not likely to materialise.
Real interest rates (one-year t-bill minus inflation) are also high about 400 basis points (4 per cent) compared to the RBI's preference for 1.25-1.75 per cent, thanks to easing inflation while rates remain high.
This provides sufficient cushion for the central bank to lower rates, DBS said.
"While this spread will further narrow as inflation gradually picks up in the months ahead, we do not expect the RBI to lower rates aggressively just to drive these real rates towards their preferred levels," said the bank.
Hence, these spreads are unlikely to be a binding factor for the central bank.
"In all, we expect the policy committee to lower its natural bias to be cautious and lower policy rates by (0.25 per cent) 25 basis points this week," it said.
"Markets will watch for guidance, where we believe the central bank will stress on the need to observe upcoming developments before taking further action," said DBS.
Odds for further easing will arise if the other inflation catalysts - better growth, farm loan waivers and imported pressures - turn out to be more benign than assumed, said DBS.