The Reserve Bank of India is the single most important institution for Indian equity investors. Its rate decisions affect the cost of borrowing for every company in the Nifty 500 | and the discount rate at which every future earnings stream is valued.
TK
Tanmay Kurtkoti
Founder & CEO, RupeeCase · QC Alpha
⏱ 14 min read⟳ Updated 2 May 2026◆ Intermediate
Every six to eight weeks, six people sit in a room in Mumbai and decide whether to raise, hold, or cut India's benchmark interest rate. Those six people | the Monetary Policy Committee | effectively set the cost of money for 1.4 billion people and every company operating in India. For equity investors, understanding what they're doing and why is not optional.
6.00%
Repo rate as of Apr 2026
4%
CPI inflation target band mid
6
MPC members voting each meeting
6
Policy meetings per year
The MPC has been explicit since 2016: inflation target 4% with a 2 to 6% tolerance band. Every policy move is either defending that band or looking through a temporary breach.
6 to 9 months before EMI and bond yields fully adjust
The thing most retail investors miss is the 6 to 9 month lag. By the time an RBI cut hits your home loan EMI, the equity market has already repriced 4 to 6 months earlier.
CPI basket weight breakdown
Food & beverages 46%
Housing 22%
Fuel & light 16%
Clothing 10%
Misc 6%
RBI intervention toolkit
Repo rate 38%
Liquidity OMO 28%
CRR/SLR 20%
FX intervention 14%
Food is 46% of the CPI basket, which is why monsoon and crude oil set the rate cycle in India far more than any western macro signal.
Nifty 50 return in 12 months after first repo action (2004 to 2024)
First cut of cycle
+21.4%
Second cut
+14.8%
Extended pause
+9.2%
First hike
+2.8%
Terminal hike
-5.1%
Historically the best 12 month equity returns come right after the first cut, not at the bottom of the cycle. The market front runs the transmission lag.
From my notebook
February 2019, RBI surprised with a 25bp cut nobody had penciled in. I was watching the MPC live at my desk. The Nifty immediately spiked 0.7%, then sold off 1.2% on the "accommodative with caution" language. Half the desk saw a cut, the other half heard caution. I bought NBFC names in the next 48 hours because the reason they were hated was cost of funds, and cost of funds only moves one way after a cut. Over the next 9 months Bajaj Finance ran 41%. The lesson I keep relearning: in India the MPC statement matters more than the rate action itself. Read the stance, not the number.
⚠Rules and figures verified 2 May 2026. RBI, MoSPI, NSE and SEBI update their published positions periodically. Check the live source before acting on a number.
The MPC | who decides rates
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) was established in 2016 under the RBI Act. It has six members: three from RBI (the Governor, Deputy Governor in charge of monetary policy, and one RBI officer) and three external members appointed by the Government of India for four-year terms. Each member has one vote; the RBI Governor has a casting vote in case of a tie.
The MPC meets six times per year | roughly every two months. Meetings happen over two days. The decision is announced on the second day. The minutes (showing how each member voted and their reasoning) are published 14 days after the meeting.
The rate at which banks borrow from RBI overnight against government securities. This is the main policy lever. When RBI raises the repo rate, borrowing becomes more expensive throughout the economy. When it cuts, borrowing cheapens. In early 2024, the repo rate stood at 6.5%.
Reverse direction
SDF (Standing Deposit Facility)
The rate at which RBI absorbs excess liquidity from banks. Replaced the reverse repo rate as the floor of the interest rate corridor in 2022. Banks park surplus funds with RBI at this rate. Corridor: SDF (floor) → Repo (policy rate) → MSF (ceiling).
Emergency borrowing
MSF (Marginal Standing Facility)
The rate at which banks can borrow overnight from RBI as an emergency measure, above their statutory liquidity ratio holdings. Typically 25 bps above the repo rate. Forms the ceiling of the interest rate corridor.
Reserve requirements
CRR and SLR
CRR (Cash Reserve Ratio): % of deposits banks must keep as cash with RBI | earns no interest. SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio): % of deposits banks must hold in government securities. Both are liquidity tools. A CRR cut releases money into the banking system; a CRR hike absorbs it.
How rate changes flow through to equity markets
The transmission from RBI rate changes to equity market impact happens through three channels:
Cost of capital: Higher rates increase the cost of corporate borrowing (loans, bonds). Companies with high debt see earnings squeezed. Companies with net cash benefit (they earn more on deposits). Capital-intensive sectors | infrastructure, real estate, auto | are most sensitive.
Discount rate: Equity valuation is the present value of future earnings, discounted at the cost of equity. Higher risk-free rates (driven by higher repo rates) raise the discount rate, reducing the present value of distant earnings. Growth stocks with earnings far in the future are hit harder than value stocks with near-term earnings.
Bank lending and credit growth: RBI rate cuts make loans cheaper, encouraging borrowing and investment. This stimulates GDP growth and corporate earnings over time. Rate hikes do the opposite | they slow credit growth and eventually slow earnings.
Sector rotation in rate cycles: In a rate cutting cycle (RBI easing), the sectors that typically outperform are: real estate (cheaper mortgages), banking (NIM expansion expectations, credit growth), capital goods (cheaper project financing), auto (EMI-sensitive demand). In a rate hiking cycle, FMCG and IT tend to hold up better | their earnings are less sensitive to domestic interest rates.
Liquidity management | the other lever
Beyond setting rates, RBI constantly manages system liquidity | the total money available in the banking system. Tools include:
OMOs (Open Market Operations): RBI buys or sells government securities in the secondary market. Buying G-Secs injects liquidity; selling absorbs it.
Foreign exchange swaps: RBI buys USD from banks and agrees to sell back later | rupee equivalent is injected into the system in the interim.
The RBI policy calendar and what to watch
RBI publishes its MPC meeting schedule at the start of each financial year (April). The six meetings typically fall in: February, April, June, August, October, and December.
On the day of the announcement, watch for:
Rate decision: Hike, cut, or hold | and by how much (typically 25 bps increments)
Stance change: "Accommodative," "Neutral," "Withdrawal of accommodation," or "Calibrated tightening" | the stance often matters more than the rate move itself
GDP and inflation projections: RBI's own forecasts for the year | market moves on revisions
Vote split: Published in the minutes 14 days later | a unanimous decision signals strong conviction; a 4-2 or 5-1 split signals division and potential future change
Monetary policy and RupeeCase strategies
RupeeCase tracks the RBI policy stance as a macro regime input. In an easing cycle (falling repo rate), the Allcap Multi Asset increases equity allocation and reduces short-duration debt. In a tightening cycle, it shifts defensive. The rate cycle also affects factor performance: in easing cycles, value and high-debt companies tend to re-rate; in tightening cycles, quality and low-leverage companies hold up better. Available at invest.rupeecase.com.
Glossary
Key terms | Module 7.2
MPC
Monetary Policy Committee | 6-member committee (3 RBI + 3 government-appointed) that sets India's benchmark interest rate. Meets 6 times per year. Established 2016.
Repo rate
Rate at which banks borrow overnight from RBI. The primary policy rate. Changes in repo rate ripple through all borrowing costs in the economy.
CRR
Cash Reserve Ratio | percentage of deposits banks must hold as cash with RBI. Earns no interest. A CRR cut releases liquidity into the banking system.
SLR
Statutory Liquidity Ratio | percentage of deposits banks must hold in government securities, gold, or RBI-approved instruments. Ensures banks always have liquid assets.
OMO
Open Market Operation | RBI buying (liquidity injection) or selling (liquidity absorption) government securities in the secondary market to manage system-level money supply.
TK
A note from the author
Why this matters
Every rate decision by the RBI sends ripples through equities, bonds, and the rupee simultaneously. Over 17 years of systematic trading, I have seen portfolios blow up simply because they did not account for monetary policy shifts. Learning to anticipate and model RBI actions is non-negotiable for anyone serious about building durable, rules-based strategies in India.
Want to put this into practice? RupeeCase is the systematic investing terminal built around everything you're learning here, factor scores, strategy backtests, portfolio construction for Indian markets.
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RBI repo moves do not transmit instantly. Banks pass through 50 to 80 percent over 3 to 6 months on lending and 30 to 60 percent on deposits.
Quick check, Module 7.2
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Up next, Module 7.3
Inflation | Types, Measurement, and Investment Impact
CPI vs WPI vs core inflation, RBI's 4% target, inflation regimes and real equity returns, sector winners and losers in different inflation environments.