According to the global financial services major, disinflationary pressures would keep the RBI on an easing path.
"We expect a 50 bps cut in the policy rate by quarter ended March 2017," Morgan Stanley said in a research note.
In the June monetary policy review, RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan kept interest rates intact, citing rising inflationary pressure, but hinted at a reduction later this year if good monsoon helps ease inflation.
Fall in inflation would be largely because key drivers like commodity prices, wage costs, fiscal consolidation, property prices remain at benign levels and give "the RBI space to cut policy rates by another 50 bps by quarter ended March 2017 and taking cumulative rate cuts since January 2015 to 200 bps," Nomura added.
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According to the global brokerage firm, "we expect macro-stability conditions to be maintained as the recovery is expected to be driven by rise in productivity, with a low risk of the economy overheating."
The hardening of the WPI index follows an uptick in retail inflation, which hit a 22-month high of 5.77 per cent in June, dampening chances of a rate cut by RBI at its next policy meet scheduled for August 9.