A gradual recovery is underway for the Indian economy and the country is expected to clock a GDP growth of 5.5% in the current fiscal and 6.6% in FY16, says a Nomura report.
According to the global financial services firm, the recovery is likely to get support from easing inflationary pressures and measures towards economic reforms.
India's manufacturing PMI rose to a two-year high in December, led by rise in both domestic and export new orders, while output growth from six core infrastructure industries rose 6.7% y-o-y in November -- all suggesting a likely rebound in November industrial production, the Japanese brokerage firm said.
More From This Section
On prices, the report said input costs have moderated due to lower commodity prices, which along with still-subdued demand, has kept output prices stable.
Nomura, however, noted that the period of a positive base effect on CPI inflation is over and CPI inflation is expected to rise from 4.4% y-o-y in November to 5.5-6.0% in the next three months, before moderating back towards 5% after March.
"Overall, we expect CPI inflation to undershoot the RBI's January 2016 target of 6%. We pencil in a 25 bps repo rate cut in both April and June (to 7.5%), followed by a pause," Varma added.
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan in the monetary policy review meet in December, 2014 had kept interest rate unchanged, saying that a shift in stance is 'premature' but hinted that a cut may come early next year if inflation continues to ease and government acts on the fiscal side.
Accordingly, the repo rate continues to be at 8% while the cash reserve ratio has also been retained at 4%.