According to the international financial services firm, global headwinds, weak rains and sluggish private sector investment activity are likely to "influence" the GDP numbers.
The July-September quarter (Q2 FY16) GDP numbers are due on November 30.
"For the quarter, we expect real GDP growth to rise 7.3 per cent from 7 per cent quarter before, but down from 8.4 per cent in the corresponding period a year ago," the report said.
Meanwhile, RBI has also lowered its economic growth forecast for the current fiscal to 7.4 per cent, from its previous projection of 7.6 per cent.
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The report noted that though the underlying trend is firming up, not all growth cylinders are firing at the same time.
On one side, urban demand is on the mend, as indicated by higher passenger car sales, indirect tax collections and easing financing costs. Moreover, upcoming public-sector wage hikes would also be positive for consumption.
But, this is counter-balanced by subdued rural demand on the back of slow wage growth, successive weak monsoons and lower fiscal support.
"A combination of pending wage adjustments, uptick in CPI inflation, delay in supply-side fixes and external event risks (US Fed rate hikes) will leave the central bank on a cautious footing," DBS said.
It added that these concerns will be aired at the policy review, with the guidance likely to point towards a prolonged pause into the next fiscal year.
The bank also plans to add asset-side products to the
offering, gradually and build a book of Rs 10,000 crore in the next five years, Gupta added.
It plans to take the same product to Indonesia and China after this, where the regulators have now floated discussion papers on how to utilise the digital infrastructure, Gupta said.
The launch of the product will also help improve cost to income ratio, Shome said, adding it plans to take it down to 45 per cent from the present 55 per cent.
When asked if the Digibank scheme will impact branch rollout plans, Gupta said DBS continues to target to take the total branches to up to 70 in the next four-five years from the 12 and explained that its focus on small businesses will require it to increase its footprint.
He, however, said this is as per the guidance given by the RBI at the time of application for the WOS model.