Earlier this month, the central bank had upped its retail inflation projection by 0.30 per cent and kept the policy stance in the neutral zone, even as it hiked the key rate by 0.25 per cent to 6.25 per cent.
The Reserve Bank of India is expected to push key policy rates
higher again in order to keep inflation in check, says an HSBC report.
Earlier this
month, the central bank had upped its retail inflation projection by 0.30 per
cent and kept the policy stance in the neutral zone, even as it hiked the key
rate by 0.25 per cent to 6.25 per cent.
The global
financial service major believes there is room for further rate hikes.
"India may
also tweak rates higher. Oil has delivered a bit of a sting, hurting the trade
balance and stoking price pressures. To keep inflation expectations in check,
RBI may need to push rates higher again," Frederic Neumann, co-head of
Asian economic research at HSBC said in a note.
According
to official data, retail inflation jumped to a four-month high of 4.87 per cent
in May on costlier food items such as fruits, vegetables and cereals, coupled
with high fuel rates. In May last year, the retail inflation was at a low of
2.18 per cent.
The
HSBC report noted that "it is hard to see India's central bank following
the Fed move for move: it, too, will lag the US by a substantial margin".
As
per the report, there is a divergence in monetary policy across the world.
While on one hand, the Fed looks determined to hike further, on the other,
central banks elsewhere don't seem to be in a hurry to up the rates.
Expectations
for Fed rate hikes have increased further in recent weeks, with HSBC's US
economists adding another 50 bps in hikes to their projections by end 2019.
Even
as the Philippines nudged rates higher, officials don't expect a prolonged
tightening cycle.
While
Indonesia, India, Singapore, might hike policy rates, Australia's central bank,
Thailand, Malaysia and Bank of Japan may give it a miss, the report said.
"Even if much of the world economy
is still expanding, relative performance is diverging. And that means monetary
policy is too, keeping investors on their toes," Neumann said adding that
"divergence will stick around for a while".

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