By Subhadip Sircar
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The rupee fell and bond yields surged on Friday after retail inflation spiked to its highest on record, raising expectations for another rate hike by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and adding to the woes of the embattled government.
RBI chief Raghuram Rajan said on Thursday he was "very uncomfortable" with the inflation reading, a comment that probably seals the case for him to deliver his third rate increase next Wednesday, despite a weak economy.
"Given the upside surprise, and the possibility of higher food prices feeding into core, we see risks that the RBI may tighten earlier than expected," Goldman Sachs said in a note following the data.
"We continue to expect the repo rate to go up to an above- consensus 8.5 percent by end-June 2014," it said, a move that would mark another 75-basis-point increase from the current policy rate.
Also Read
The rupee weakened as far as 62.28 to the dollar, a one-week low, and closed onshore trading at 62.125/135, a third day of losses. It had ended trade at 61.81/82 on Thursday.
For the week, it fell 1.1 percent, after three successive weeks of gains.
Bond yields surged, with the 10-year yield up 6 basis points at 8.91 percent.
The BSE Sensex ended down 1.3 percent.
Sharply higher food prices drove up retail inflation to 11.24 percent in November from 10.17 percent in October, data released on Thursday showed.
Some traders even flagged the prospect of a surprise 50- basis-point hike by the RBI, though most still expect a more modest increase of 25 basis points.
High inflation has been a key factor behind the Congress government's poor showing in recent state elections and it can ill-afford continued discontent among its support base of primarily poor people ahead of general elections due by May.
Factory output, however, showed a contraction in October, muddying the waters for the central bank, which will also be under pressure from the government to support a fledging economic recovery.
"After such a print and statement, he (Rajan) now has to hike rates next week - hurting the growth outlook, or lose credibility, both of which would be INR-negative," said Dariusz Kowalczyk, a Hong Kong-based strategist with Credit Agricole CIB.
"The government is bound to pressure him not to do so given the unfavourable growth impact ahead of H114 elections, and we expect the INR to keep falling," he said.
(Additional reporting by Swati Bhat; Editing by Chris Gallagher and Clarence Fernandez)