Debt fund managers expect the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to adopt a more dovish tone in its monetary policy

announcement on Friday, December 5, as strong GDP data, soft inflation and a Rupee depreciation present a mixed backdrop

for rates and bond markets. A recent Moneycontrol Poll estimates that the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Reserve

Bank of India (RBI) is likely to cut repo rate by 25 basis points (bps) in the upcoming monetary policy.

Also read: Rupee’s slide to have only marginal impact on inflation; govt could better fiscal deficit target in FY26:

PwC’s Banerjee

What fund managers expect

Recently, India’s July–September GDP growth came in at 8.2 percent, above expectations and strong enough for several

forecasters to revise full-year real growth estimates to above 7 percent. At the same time, inflation has stayed

unusually low due to favourable base effects, while the RBI’s recent dollar sales to stabilise the rupee have drawn out

liquidity from the banking system and pushed short-term rates higher.

With this combination, the bond market is now watching whether the RBI acknowledges the liquidity strain and whether it

signals, or announces, an Open Market Operation (OMO) purchase of government securities. As previously reported by

Moneycontrol, such an OMO purchase in December would inject durable liquidity and help ease bond yields and short-term

money market rates.

Fund managers say they are going into the policy with existing strategies rather than making last-minute changes, but

the macro developments are shaping how they think the RBI will respond.

Quantum Mutual Fund’s Sneha Pandey said the growth numbers leave space for policy support. Even if growth in the second

half slows to around 6 percent, she said, “You would still see close to 7 percent real GDP growth for FY26, which is

huge.” She added that the government’s nominal GDP assumption of 10.1 percent “seems slightly ambitious now,” with

inflation pointing to something closer to 9–9.5 percent.

Pandey believes that if the RBI wants to front-load support, “now is a better time than February,” as base effects may

fade and inflation could rise later in the year. “Even if they don’t cut, they cannot come out and sound hawkish,” she

said, noting that the market will be eyeing the narrative being presented.

Axis Mutual Fund’s Head of Fixed Income, Devang Shah added that the policy setup is challenging because “the RBI faces a

weak rupee, low inflation and strong GDP prints.” While current inflation is “near zero,” he said forward inflation

could rise due to base effects and food inflation normalisation, though GST cuts should keep it “roughly at 4–4.25

percent.” Shah said the market will be looking for either a rate cut or “clear liquidity-support guidance.”

Rupee pressures are central to expectations for liquidity measures. With the RBI intervening through dollar sales,

liquidity has tightened and short-end rates have risen. This increases the likelihood that the RBI may turn to OMOs or

similar tools to ease conditions.

Kotak Mahindra AMC’s Head of Fixed Income, Abhishek Bisen, said the currency backdrop limits the RBI’s ability to manage

liquidity through the FX route. “From that point of view, the chances of OMOs are very bright,” he said. He added that

any easing will only be effective if accompanied by a softer tone. “They cannot cut rates and sound hawkish. That will

spoil the benefit of the rate cut.”

Also read: Gangbuster GDP, grumpy markets: What’s going on?

How managers are positioned

Pandey said Quantum is keeping duration in the 4–5-year range, with around 70 percent of the portfolio in short-end AAA

corporate bonds and SDLs, and roughly 30 percent in long-term government securities. She said the long-end portion is a

tactical hedge, and the fund is cautious about the supply of state development loans in the second half.

Similarly, Shah said Axis Mutual Fund reduced duration earlier and is holding steady going into the policy. Duration in

its G-Sec fund is around 7.5–8 years, down from 11–12 years, while corporate and short-term funds are closer to three

years. Shah said they continue to hold limited tactical long-end exposure that could benefit if the RBI signals

liquidity support or announces OMOs.

Bisen added that Kotak’s portfolios continue to follow a barbell approach. He said it is “not necessary to cut duration”

because the yield curve remains steep, and that the commonly used 2–4-year segment “is not necessarily the safest place”

when policy eventually turns. Instead, the barbell structure, combining very short-term holdings with selected

longer-term bonds, allows portfolios to respond better whether the policy turns dovish or remains cautious. He added

that with inflation likely around 4 percent next year and growth around 6.5 percent, the underlying environment supports

carrying duration.

Across fund houses, managers say the immediate market reaction will depend on how clearly the RBI addresses liquidity

conditions.

Disclaimer: The views and investment tips expressed by investment experts on Moneycontrol.com are their own and not

those of the website or its management. Moneycontrol.com advises users to check with certified experts before taking any

investment decisions.