The Reserve Bank of India's Strategic Wait
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has held its policy repo rate steady at 5.25% [2, 3, 4, 8, 10, 23]. This decision, announced on February 6, 2026, signals a strategic pause in the monetary easing cycle that had seen 125 basis points of cuts since February 2025 [3, 4, 10]. The central bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) retained its "neutral" stance, balancing an optimistic view on domestic growth against persistent inflationary pressures and an evolving statistical base [2, 4, 23].
Growth Resilience Amidst Inflationary Noise
The central bank upgraded its real GDP growth projections for fiscal year 2025-26 to 7.4%, a modest increase from the previous 7.3% estimate [2, 4, 6, 10, 12]. Projections for the initial quarters of fiscal year 2026-27 were also revised upwards, with Q1 now forecast at 6.9% (up from 6.7%) and Q2 at 7.0% (up from 6.8%) [2, 4, 11, 12, 26]. This reflects continued domestic demand momentum, supported by trade deals with the EU and US, and a resilient services sector [11, 12, 26].
However, the inflation outlook presents a more complex picture. The FY26 CPI inflation forecast was nudged up to 2.1% from 2.0% [4, 18, 24], with Q4 FY26 revised to 3.2% from 2.9% [2, 4, 23]. For Q1 and Q2 of FY27, inflation is now projected at 4.0% and 4.2% respectively, indicating a slight increase from earlier forecasts [2, 4, 7, 23]. Governor Sanjay Malhotra attributed this "noise" in headline inflation primarily to a significant surge in precious metal prices, contributing an estimated 60-70 basis points to the outlook [2, 5, 23]. Despite this, the RBI emphasized that underlying core inflation remains benign [2, 5, 34].
Data Recalibration to Drive Future Policy
A critical factor shaping the RBI's near-term policy perspective is the impending release of new base years for GDP and CPI calculations, expected in mid-February 2026 [5, 32]. The GDP series will shift to a 2022-23 base, while CPI will adopt a 2024 base [32, 37]. Consequently, the central bank has deliberately deferred its full-year projections for FY27 to the April MPC meeting, awaiting the recalibrated data [5, 11, 32]. This move signifies a deliberate strategy to anchor future policy decisions on updated macroeconomic indicators, adding a layer of near-term uncertainty.
Global Echoes and Market Reaction
Globally, central banks are largely holding steady. The US Federal Reserve maintained its Fed Funds rate at 3.75% in January 2026 [17, 27, 35], while the European Central Bank kept its main refinancing rate at 2.15% following a period of rate cuts [16, 19, 25, 31]. The Eurozone's inflation has moderated to 1.7% [19]. Precious metals, including gold and silver, have seen significant price appreciation, driven by safe-haven demand amidst geopolitical tensions and global trade uncertainties [30, 39, 41]. Gold prices surged to $5,047.07 and silver to $89.35 in early February 2026 [41].
Following the RBI's announcement, Indian equity markets closed with modest gains, the Sensex rising 266.47 points and the Nifty 50 advancing 50.90 points [14, 28]. While FMCG and private banking stocks posted gains, IT and PSU banks saw declines [14, 20]. The bond market reacted to the RBI's retained neutral stance, with India's 10-year bond yields rising as a mildly dovish tone was not fully materialized [14]. Analysts note that the current policy maintains a balance between macroeconomic stability and support for productive sectors, awaiting clearer signals from the evolving data landscape and commodity price movements [4, 5].