The
Reserve
Bank of
India’s
(RBI’s)
decision
not to
lower the
repo rate
was in a
way
expected;
and it
would be
interesting
to see how
the market
reacts.
Post the
US
Federal
Reserve
(US Fed)
lowering
rates, it
was
widely
debated
whether
the RBI would lower rates before the next policy or wait for the formal occasion.
It may be pointed out that the decision of the US Fed to lower rates in the first phase did not quite move the
markets. The latest move to bring the rate down to 0 – 0.25 per cent with a quantitative easing (QE) attached
would also be watched carefully. The cut by Bank of England (BOE) or the European Central Bank’s (ECB’s)
assurance of quantitative easing (QE), too, have not quite lifted sentiment. The question is whether a rate cut will work in times like these? There are two ways of looking at this. The
first is from the macro perspective where rate cuts are to spur investment, and hence growth. The earlier cuts
of 135 basis points (bps) have not quite delivered since the problem in India is on the demand side. Hence,
this rate cut, even if transmitted adequately will not change the course of the economy. Also, it cannot
counter the effects of the virus or the spread of the same. This has been accepted in the global context, too.
The other view is from the point of view of being a palliative at the time when the economy could be moving
towards a faster slowdown due to this epidemic. We have seen that several industries have been affected
directly like tourism, hospitality, aviation. Those like pharma, auto, electronics where the supply chains have
been impacted are also likely to confront challenges as the China problem has become a global one. Some
firms in these industries could be impacted negatively in terms of sales coming down and their working
capital cost-servicing being a burden. In such a case, the lower interest rate scenario will help to alleviate
their travails. This could ease the pressure on banks in a way as the probability of potential non-performing
assets (NPAs) come down.
The latter looks more likely the impact of this rate cut provided there is efficient transmission. The signal sent
clearly is that the RBI is willing to do everything to lessen the pain of the virus attack to the extent that it is
possible. It may be recollected that the RBI had actually used novel measures in the earlier policy to lower
rates like the long-term refinance option (LTRO) and cash reserve ratio (CRR) exemption on certain loans
(SMR and retail). That has worked to an extent to help the concerned segments though not really brought in a
large amount of fresh lending. The same will be the case here where the benefits will flow and pain
alleviated.
Lowering rates at this time also carry the risk of affecting deposits, as banks will have to rework their deposit
rates considering that the lending rates have already been affected where they have been linked to
benchmarks like the T-bills yields, which have been going down. To maintain profitability through steady net
interest margins, banks will have to lower deposit rates, too, which can come in the way of savers. This is a
conundrum that banks will face.
Rate cut, in my view, cannot stop the virus from playing out its course and have an impact on the global
financial markets and economy.
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