RBI Holds Rates: India Bets on Stability Amid Growth & Imported Inflation

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AuthorVihaan Mehta|Published at:
RBI Holds Rates: India Bets on Stability Amid Growth & Imported Inflation
Overview

The Reserve Bank of India maintained its policy repo rate at 5.25%, signaling a strategic shift towards policy stability after an easing cycle. This decision, driven by favorable trade agreements and fiscal discipline, allows the RBI to focus on managing imported inflation from rising commodity prices. Despite upward inflation forecast revisions, underlying domestic pressures remain benign, supported by robust growth projections and proactive liquidity management. The central bank's stance prioritizes controlled expansion over aggressive stimulus.

### Policy Stability Takes Center Stage

The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) unanimously decided to hold the policy repo rate steady at 5.25% on Friday, February 6, 2026. This marks a definitive end to the 125 basis points easing cycle that has shaped monetary policy over the preceding period. HSBC Global Investment Research notes this decision signals a strategic pivot toward policy stability, suggesting the central bank will refrain from further growth stimulus unless the economy faces a significant shock. This move aligns with market expectations, particularly given the backdrop of favorable trade deal announcements with the EU and the United States, which are anticipated to bolster growth prospects over time.

### Growth Outlook Strengthens, Inflation Under Watch

While maintaining a stable rate, the RBI has revised its macroeconomic forecasts. The inflation projection for Q4 FY26 was nudged up from 2.9% to 3.2%, and the H1 FY27 forecast was slightly increased from 4.0% to 4.1%. However, the central bank emphasized that these upward revisions are primarily driven by higher precious metal prices, contributing an estimated 60-70 basis points to inflation, while underlying domestic inflationary pressures remain subdued. Concurrently, the FY27 first-half growth forecast was raised by 20 basis points to 7.0%. Broader economic surveys project India's FY27 GDP growth between 6.8% and 7.2%. This resilience is attributed to strong domestic demand, effective reforms, and prudent fiscal management, even as global trade dynamics remain uncertain.

### Market Dynamics and Liquidity Management

The decision to hold rates, coupled with marginal upward inflation revisions, has prompted a shift in market focus towards proactive liquidity management by the RBI. While acknowledging rising global bond yields, the RBI highlighted the continued transmission of policy easing into domestic lending and deposit rates. The commitment to align the overnight call rate with the repo rate and manage liquidity fluctuations is expected to support market sentiment. The 10-year G-Sec yield is currently trading around 6.7%, reflecting a stable yield environment. In terms of external stability, trade agreements are expected to support India's current account and balance of payments, thereby stabilizing the rupee and reducing the need for sustained RBI intervention in foreign exchange markets. The USD/INR exchange rate is currently hovering around 90.25. In Asian markets, central banks are expected to show divergent monetary policies by 2026, with some tightening while others maintain accommodative stances.

### Analyst Sentiment and Future Trajectory

Experts view the RBI's move as prudent, balancing growth imperatives with inflation vigilance. Devang Shah of Axis Mutual Fund noted that favorable trade deals and the Union Budget strengthen India's macro outlook for a durable growth cycle into FY27. Analysts like Aditi Nayar of ICRA anticipate the trade deals to positively impact India's FY2027 GDP growth. The government's Budget 2026 targets a fiscal deficit of 4.3% for FY27, signaling continued fiscal consolidation. While markets initially saw a dip, with the Nifty declining 0.57%, analysts suggest the stable rate regime supports medium- to long-duration debt investments. The focus now shifts to the RBI's continued agility in liquidity provision and the evolving impact of global commodity prices, particularly precious metals, on the inflation outlook.

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