Saturday, December 10, 2016

What is Repo Rate?

Picture Shows the Current Indian Repo Rate of 6.25%
India'a Current Repo Interest Rate stands at 6.25%

Repo rate is the most important monetary policy tool in the hands of the central banks.
An increase in Repo Rate reduces inflation.
How?
An increase in Repo Rate will make borrowing for commercial banks costly and therefore in turn they are forced to increase their lending rates. This will increase the borrowing costs of business and industry and they tend to curtail fresh investments. This in turn reduces the incomes of people who would have executed those expansion plans. This reduced income lowers the demand for consumption goods and consequently brings down the prices of these commodities. Lower commodity prices result in lower inflation.
This is how macro economics work or at least supposed to work.
The opposite happens if the Repo Rate is reduced - it spurs growth and inflation tends to go up.
In conclusion central banks increase Repo Rate if they want to tame inflation and reduce it if they want to spur growth.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in its latest review meeting, contrary to wide expectations that the Repo rate will be reduced by 25 basis points, maintained the Repo rate at 6.25% indicating that it believes that any reduction would stoke inflation.
Suggested Further Study:
  1. What Is Basis Points?
  2. Yield Definition
  3. Yield Slide
  4. What is the Relationship Between a Bond's Market Price and Its Yield to Maturity?
  5. What Is Internal Rate of Return or IRR In Simple Terms?
  6. Value Investing


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