A gradual recovery is underway for the Indian economy and the country is expected to clock a GDP growth of 5.5 per cent in the current fiscal and 6.6 per cent in FY16, says a Nomura report.
According to the global financial services firm, the recovery is likely to get support from easing inflationary pressures and measures towards economic reforms.
India’s manufacturing PMI rose to a two-year high in December, led by a rise in both domestic and export new orders, while output growth from six core infrastructure industries rose 6.7 per cent year-on-year in November — all suggesting a likely rebound in November industrial production, the Japanese brokerage firm said.
“We expect the economy to gradually recover in 2015 with real GDP growth of 5.5 per cent y-o-y in FY15 (year-end March 2015) and 6.6 per cent in FY16,” Sonal Varma, India economist at Nomura, said in a research note.
On prices, the report said input costs have moderated due to lower commodity prices, which along with still-subdued demand, has kept output prices stable.
Nomura, however, noted that the period of a positive base effect on CPI inflation is over and CPI inflation is expected to rise from 4.4 per cent y-o-y in November to 5.5-6 per cent in the next three months, before moderating back towards 5 per cent after March.
“Overall, we expect CPI inflation to undershoot the RBI’s January 2016 target of 6 per cent. We pencil in a 25 bps repo rate cut in both April and June (to 7.5 per cent), followed by a pause,” Varma added.
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan in the monetary policy review meet in December 2014 had kept interest rates unchanged, saying that a shift in stance is ‘premature’ but hinted that a cut may come early next year if inflation continues to ease and Government acts on the fiscal side.
Accordingly, the repo rate continues to be at 8 per cent while the cash reserve ratio has also been retained at 4 per cent.
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