DBS said one should not expect aggressive rate cuts by central bank from here on, and the recent uptick in purchasing managers views make the upcoming review a "close call" for the central bank.
"The January PMIs (purchasing managers indices) reinforce that this week's RBI decision will be a close call," DBS said in a note.
The Nikkei manufacturing and service PMIs rose from a soft patch in November-December suggesting that "the impact of the cash crunch is easing", it said.
"While it's a close call, we expect the RBI to deliver a 0.25 per cent repo rate cut at the February 8 policy meeting on the back of low inflation and a negative output gap," HSBC India chief economist Pranjul Bhandari said in a note.
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"It is clear that the central bank is nearing the end of the monetary easing cycle as pent-up demand and easing cash shortage lift growth next year," DBS said, pointing out to oil prices and high rates in the US as a risk.
On factors that can aid the central bank to cut more, DBS said a conservative fiscal policy, easing inflation trajectory and short-term risks to growth keep the door open for further easing.
It termed the Budget proposals as a balanced approach between fiscal discipline and also accommodating growth concerns.