The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee wrapped up its 60th meeting on Wednesday with a unanimous vote to hold the policy repo rate steady at 5.25%. The SDF rate stays at 5.00%, the MSF and Bank Rate at 5.50%. MPC maintained a neutral stance, while keeping a flexibility to act if need arose.
Governor Sanjay Malhotra termed the MPC decision as one of prudent watchfulness, emphasizing that the Indian economy confronts a genuine supply shock from the West Asia conflict, and with core inflation still muted and fundamentals sound, the MPC chose to observe rather than act.” On the surface, this reads as responsible central banking. Below the surface, several questions deserve sharper scrutiny. In particular, the following points need to be kept in mind by investors.
Is this a prolonged pause?
The language in the MPC’s statement is telling. The MPC “decided to continue with the neutral stance, retaining the flexibility to respond judiciously to incoming information.” To me it translates to – “no rate cut is on the table for now, and the Committee is giving itself maximum optionality.”
The RBI is effectively signaling that the next move — whether a cut or a hike — depends entirely on how the West Asia conflict evolves. It explicitly lists supply chains, energy infrastructure damage, shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz, and potential El Niño conditions as risk factors. Until these clarify, it is reasonable to expect RBI to stay on pause.
In my view, a prolonged pause — potentially through H1 FY27 — is the base case. If El Niño materializes and energy prices stay elevated, the next move could even be a hike, though that remains a tail risk. Rate cut expectations should be firmly pushed to H2 FY27 at the earliest.
Is the Inflation Forecast Adequate?
The RBI has projected CPI inflation for FY27 at 4.6%, with a Q3 spike to 5.2%. Core inflation is seen at 4.4%. At first glance, this appears to meaningfully revise up from the recent sub-4% prints. But look harder and the forecast raises uncomfortable questions.
The statement acknowledges that crude oil price volatility is a major upside risk — but the baseline assumption appears to embed a relatively contained near-term impact. Retail petrol and diesel prices have not been revised as of the statement, even as LPG, commercial fuels and premium petrol variants have already seen increases. If the government is forced to pass through higher crude costs to retail consumers — a political decision, not an economic one — inflation could easily breach the Q3 estimate of 5.2%.
The Governor also acknowledged that the Indian rupee depreciated more in 2025-26 than in prior years, even with relatively stronger fundamentals. A materially weaker USD/INR naturally amplifies imported inflation — particularly for crude, edible oils, and fertilizers. The statement reiterates that RBI policy is to smooth volatility, not target levels. But if the rupee faces sustained depreciation pressure from FPI outflows (US$5.4 billion already in April 1–6 alone), the inflation math becomes harder. The forecast does not appear to explicitly model a significantly weaker rupee scenario.
The 4.6% average forecast looks understated if oil stays elevated and USDINR weakens further. A realistic upside scenario puts FY27 average CPI at 4.9–5.2%. The Q3 estimate of 5.2% may prove to be a floor, not a peak. Investors may not assume monetary easing on the basis of this forecast alone.
Is the Growth Forecast Realistic?
The RBI projects real GDP growth of 6.9% for FY27, stepping down from the estimated 7.6% in FY26. Quarter-by-quarter, growth is expected to trough at 6.7% in Q2 before recovering to 7.2% by Q4.
The statement points to robust rabi crop prospects and healthy reservoir levels (47% of capacity vs. 40% a year ago) as support factors. But ground reports of untimely rains and hailstorm damage to standing rabi crops across several key producing states — Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan — suggest the actual rabi outturn may disappoint against the Second Advance Estimate. The RBI's own footnote flags that rabi foodgrain production growth of 3.0% could be an overestimate. Separately, the El Niño risk to Kharif 2027 is flagged as a concern but remains outside the baseline assumption. If both rabi disappoints and Kharif is weak, rural income stress will weigh on private consumption and demand — which the RBI is banking on as a growth driver.
Merchandise exports contracted 0.2% during January-February 2026, with the US (India's largest market) registering a 17.5% contraction. Trade deficit widened sharply to US$61.8 billion in Jan-Feb vs. US$37.1 billion a year ago. The RBI's own data shows FPI outflows of US$16.5 billion in FY26 and a further US$5.4 billion in just the first week of FY27. The 6.9% growth projection implicitly assumes these headwinds are manageable — but if global demand weakens further and the conflict prolongs, the export channel offers little buffer.
The government has budgeted central capex to rise 11.5% in FY27, with effective capital expenditure (including state transfers) growing 22.1%. This provides a genuine growth floor that partly justifies the RBI's relatively sanguine baseline. But public capex cannot offset simultaneously weaker exports, a stressed rural economy, and a cautious private sector.
In my view, 6.9% growth for FY27 is achievable only under benign assumptions — conflict contained, El Niño averted, rupee stabilized, rabi harvests close to estimates. Strip out even two of these assumptions and growth is more likely in the 6.0–6.3% range. The RBI appears to have incorporated a partial haircut from 7.6% but may not have gone far enougWhat Else Did the RBI Announce?
What else RBI announced
Beyond rates, the RBI announced several regulatory and market development measures. On capital adequacy, it proposed removing the NPA provisioning condition for inclusion of quarterly profits in CRAR — a modest relief for bank capital reporting. The Investment Fluctuation Reserve (IFR) requirement is also being dispensed with for commercial banks, given that they already maintain market risk capital charges.
On market development, the term money market is being opened up to non-bank entities (AIFIs, NBFCs, housing finance companies), which should deepen market participation and improve monetary transmission from overnight to longer-term rates. MSME onboarding on TReDS platforms is being simplified by removing the due diligence requirement — a small but meaningful ease-of-business move for smaller firms.
Conclusion
The RBI maintained the status quo on the expected lines. But “wait and watch” has its own risks in a fast-moving geopolitical environment. Three gaps stand out in today's statement:
· The pause is likely longer than markets expect.
· Inflation risks are real and may be underweighted. The rupee, oil, and El Niño form a perfect storm.
· Growth of 6.9% relies on a lot going right. Agriculture, exports, and financial markets are all flashing amber.
Investors may do better adequately discounting RBI forecasts and position accordingly.