Reserve Bank cuts rates to ease cash squeeze, support growth
By Saikat Chatterjee
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) India on Saturday unexpectedly cut its main short-term lending rate for the second time in as many weeks to ease a growing cash squeeze, spur faltering economic growth and fend off damage from the global financial crisis.
Analysts said the surprise central bank move, coming just a week after it left rates unchanged at a policy review, showed its concern that strains on Asia's third-largest economy were quickly becoming more severe.
"These actions were necessary (and had) to be taken on the liquidity front. And with call rates above 20 percent the situation was getting worse," said Vikas Agarwal, strategist at JP Morgan.
"The only question at this point of time which arises is why this was not taken at the time of the policy review last week and the only explanation is they did not anticipate the extent of the liquidity crunch," Agarwal added.
Policymakers around the world have slashed interest rates in recent weeks and injected huge amounts into their banking systems to try to combat the spillover effects of the global financial crisis, which is causing credit markets to freeze up and threatens to plunge the world economy into recession.
Analysts said the surprise move meant concerns over growth and cash tightness overrode inflationary issues but bankers said they would adopt a wait-and-see stance before deciding on lowering their lending and deposit rates.
V. Vaidyanathan, executive director at ICICI Bank the country's second biggest lender told CNBC-TV 18 the move was a welcome step to tide over the cash crunch but it won't rush into interest rate cuts immediately.
The central bank cut the repo rate or its main short-term lending rate by 50 basis points to 7.5 percent and banks' cash reserve requirements by 100 basis points to 5.5 percent. Continued...
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