Dec quarter growth may slip to 5.5-6% on demonetisation: BofA-ML

The global financial services major reported that the RBI is expected to go for a 25 bps rate cut in its February 8 meet.

Update: 2016-12-13 11:12 GMT
BofA-ML expects CPI inflation to be at 4 per cent in November and 5 per cent in financial year 2018, consistent with the RBI's 2-6 per cent inflation target.

New Delhi: India's economic growth may slip to 5.5-6 per cent in the current quarter as demonetisation is expected to hurt production during November-December, says a Bank of America Merrill Lynch report.

"We expect demonetisation to hurt production in November-December. Each month of disruption hits growth by 0.3-0.5 per cent of GDP," BofA-ML said in a research note, adding that post note ban, discretionary demand has been badly
affected.

The global financial services major reported that the Reserve Bank of India is expected to go for a 25 bps rate cut in its February 8 policy review meet after industrial production contracted by 1.9 per cent in October.

RBI in its December policy review meet surprised with a status quo on policy, largely premised on upside risk to January-March quarter inflation and limited transient growth drag owing to demonetisation.

On December 7, RBI kept interest rate unchanged, while it slashed the economic growth projection by half a per cent to 7.1 in the first policy review post demonetisation. Even as RBI sharply lowered its real GVA forecast for financial year 2017 by 50 bps to 7.1 per cent, it noted that the revision is largely owing to the downside surprise in the second quarter of this fiscal.

The next monetary policy meet scheduled on February 8. Moreover, RBI is expected to adopt an accommodative policy stance largely owing to weak IIP data, demonetisation and its impact on growth, and moderating inflation.

BofA-ML expects CPI inflation to be at 4 per cent in November and 5 per cent in financial year 2018, consistent with the RBI's 2-6 per cent inflation target.
On Fed Rate hike, the report said the US recovery is positive for India for the medium term as this boosts exports demand and supports growth. Fed rate hikes will continue to rein in global commodity prices that helps stabilize India's 'imported' inflation, it noted.

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