"There is nothing so fatal to character as half finished tasks" - David Lloyd George
RBI released minutes of the MPC
The minutes of Dec 5 - 7 MPC meeting were released. Please refer to the earlier posts MPC Dec 7 and Nov Inflation blog post. RBI had raised policy repo rate by 35 bps to 6.25%. The SDF - MSF corridor stands at 6% - 6.5%. The broad narrative rests around downside risks to global growth and the drag from net exports; resilience of domestic growth; stickiness of inflation on partial pass through of higher input cost price pressures seen earlier. While the members agree on a lower trajectory of inflation, some members expressed their concerns on the lagged effect of monetary policy and that a wait and watch stance will be more appropriate other expressed concerns on inflation expectations becoming unhinged. Jayant Verma was a lone dove who dissented to the repo rate hike and status quo on stance (withdrawal of accommodation) while Ashima Goyal dissented to the status quo on stance citing contraction in durable liquidity and inability of the LAF system to compensation for liquidity shocks and conducive financial conditions should support credit creation even as repo rate rises.
The domestic growth resilience as spoken about in the Monthly Bulletin and stickiness of inflation alongside higher crude oil prices have seen tad bit of paying in OIS with 1Y at 6.68% (prev day 6.66%), 2Y at 6.3950% (prev 6.37%) and 5Y at 6.37% (prev 6.35%). 10Y gsec is yielding flat 7.30%.
US Housing data shows sharp downtrend
US Data disappointed - Nov Existing home sales decreased 7.7% mom to a seasonally adjusted 4.09 mn units, decelerating for the tenth straight month. Total sales in November were down 35.4% from a year ago. Higher mortgage rates are biting into the affordability factor and the price growth has slowed markedly. Remember the housing permits data release the prior day showed a marked slowdown.
Market action and levels
The US yields dropped with 2Y down 8 bps and 10Y down 7 bps from yesterday highs. 2x10 curve inversion has materially corrected to mid 50 levels. Remember in my earlier post Yield inversion, I had written that the front end data deterioration will be an important determinant for curve inversion. I had written if data is to deteriorate further we could see spread inversion correct to 50 bps.
USDINR continues to trade in the 82.60 - 82.90 range.
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