inflation, which touched a seven-month high in October, is expected
to rise further and cross the 4 per cent mark this month, driven by rise
in vegetable and oil prices, experts say.
According to global
financial services majors like Nomura, BofAML and Morgan Stanley, price
pressures are likely to build further in the coming months following a
cyclical recovery in the economy and rise in vegetable and oil prices.
"We
expect CPI inflation to rise above 4 per cent in November and stay
above the RBI’s target of 4 per cent through 2018," Nomura said in a
research note.
Stronger food and fuel inflation pushed up headline CPI inflation in October to a 7-month high of 3.58 per cent.
According to BofAML, November CPI inflation is likely to be around 4.5 per cent.
It
however added that government action, like importing onions and
containing hoarding, will be far more effective in containing food
prices.
Retail inflation has been rising consistently since June
amid a slowdown in factory output measured on Index of Industrial
Production (IIP).
According to Morgan Stanley economists, besides
the rise in food and oil prices, further implementation of HRA-related
hikes by more states and across sectors will also fuel inflationary
pressures.
"In the near term, upside risks to inflation could
arise due to a further rise in global oil prices, whereas recently
announced cut in GST (Goods and Services Tax) rates for most mass
consumption items could provide some respite," the global brokerage firm
said in a report.
Retail inflation and GDP growth print due later
this month are two main data points the Reserve Bank considers for
setting the key interest rate.
The Reserve Bank of India, in its
policy review meet on October 4, kept benchmark interest rate unchanged
on fears of rising inflation while lowering growth forecast to 6.7 per
cent for the current fiscal.
22 Nov 2017, 04:48 AM