---
title: "Inflation | RupeeCase Learn"
description: "CPI vs WPI vs core inflation, RBI's 4% target, inflation regimes and real equity returns, sector winners and losers. By Tanmay Kurtkoti, QCAlpha / rupee-case."
source_url: "https://www.rupeecase.com/learn/path-7/module-7-3-inflation-types-measurement-investment-impact"
---

Skip to main content

    [Learn](/learn)&#8250;[Path 7: Macroeconomics](/learn/path-7)&#8250;Module 7.3

# Inflation | Types, Measurement, and Investment Impact

    Inflation is the silent portfolio destroyer that most investors ignore until it's too late. Understanding it | how it's measured, what drives it, and how to position around it | is essential for any serious Indian investor.

      TK
Tanmay Kurtkoti
Founder & CEO, RupeeCase · QC Alpha

      &#9201; 13 min read
      &#10227; Updated 16 Jun 2026 &#9670; Intermediate

    In 2022, India's CPI crossed 7%. The Nifty had a choppy year. RBI hiked rates aggressively. IT stocks | which had soared in the 2020-21 bull run | corrected sharply as higher discount rates crushed their valuations. Meanwhile, energy and commodity stocks outperformed. This is the inflation playbook in action. Understanding it before it happens is worth far more than reacting after.

        4.0%
RBI CPI target mid point

        2 to 6%
Tolerance band

        7.8%
Peak CPI Apr 2022

        299
Items in CPI basket

      Every 50bp move outside the 2 to 6% band has triggered a policy response within two meetings. The band is the single most predictable rule in Indian macro.

        1
Supply shock
Crude, monsoon, or global commodity price jump

        2
WPI rises first
Wholesale price input cost pass through 2 to 3 months

        3
CPI follows
Retail picks up the lag by months 3 to 5

        4
RBI reacts
Rate hike or stance change once band breached

        5
Market rotates
Out of long duration growth, into energy and value

      The inflation chain is predictable. What trips most retail investors up is the 3 to 5 month lag between WPI and CPI. By the time CPI prints high, the trade is already crowded.

          CPI basket India

            * Food & beverages 46%

            * Housing 22%

            * Fuel & light 16%

            * Clothing 10%

            * Misc 6%

          WPI basket India

            * Manufactured 64%

            * Primary articles 23%

            * Fuel & power 13%

      CPI is a consumer story, WPI is a producer story. That is why WPI usually rises first. Energy and metals pass through in weeks, retail food prices take a season.

        Nifty sector return in high inflation year (2022, CPI > 6%)

          Nifty Energy

          +18.2%

          Nifty Metal

          +12.8%

          Nifty Bank

          +9.4%

          Nifty 50

          +4.3%

          Nifty FMCG

          -1.8%

          Nifty IT

          -24.1%

      Long duration growth sectors like IT take the biggest hit when inflation spikes. Commodity, energy and bank names are the mechanical hedge in Indian equity.

        From my notebook

        April 2022 the CPI print came at 7.79%. I was already light on IT after the March WPI reading of 14.55% told me something was coming. Most of my WhatsApp groups were still debating whether TCS at Rs 3800 was a "buy the dip". I flipped the factor weights on my long only sleeve: cut IT from 22% to 9%, added Coal India and NTPC to 14%. It felt uncomfortable because everyone else was still buying the growth names they had owned for two years. By December 2022 Nifty IT was down 24%, Coal India was up 58%. The trade was not clever, it was mechanical. CPI print gives you the number, the sector rotation is physics.

  &#9888;
  Rules and figures verified 16 Jun 2026. RBI, MoSPI, NSE and SEBI update their published positions periodically. Check the live source before acting on a number.

## Three types of inflation you need to know

        Demand-pull inflation

        Too much money chasing too few goods. Happens when the economy is growing strongly, credit is cheap, and consumer spending is high. India experienced this post-COVID as pent-up demand was released into a supply-constrained economy.

        Cost-push inflation

        Rising input costs push up prices across the economy. Crude oil is India's biggest cost-push driver. When crude rises, transport costs rise, which feeds into everything from FMCG to cement. Supply shocks (bad monsoon → food prices) also cause cost-push.

        Core inflation

        CPI excluding food and fuel | the "sticky" part of inflation. Core inflation is harder to reduce than headline CPI because it reflects structural wage and services price trends. RBI watches core inflation closely when deciding policy because food/fuel price shocks are transitory.

## CPI vs WPI | the measurement battle

    **CPI (Consumer Price Index)** | measures price changes from the household's perspective. India's CPI basket has approximately 299 items, weighted by household expenditure surveys. Food and beverages have the highest weight (~45%). CPI is the RBI's official inflation target measure. Published monthly by MoSPI.

    **WPI (Wholesale Price Index)** | measures price changes at the factory/wholesale level. More volatile than CPI because it's more exposed to commodity price swings. WPI covers ~697 items with manufacturing products having the highest weight (~65%). When WPI is very high and CPI is moderate, it means manufacturers are absorbing cost increases | eventually margins suffer or CPI rises.

    [MoSPI | Consumer Price Index data and methodology](https://mospi.gov.in/consumer-price-index)

## RBI's 4% inflation target | the framework that changed everything

    In 2016, the Government and RBI formalised a Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework. The target: 4% CPI inflation, with a tolerance band of ±2% (so 2 to 6%). If CPI stays outside the 2 to 6% band for three consecutive quarters, RBI must write an explanatory letter to the government.

    This framework fundamentally changed how monetary policy works in India. Before FIT, RBI balanced multiple objectives | inflation, growth, financial stability, exchange rate. After FIT, the primary mandate is price stability. This means every rate decision is now anchored to where CPI is relative to 4%.

      **The practical investor implication:** When CPI is above 6%, RBI is under pressure to hike and will do so even if it slows growth. When CPI is below 4%, RBI has space to cut to support growth. The 4-6% zone is where RBI has the most flexibility | here, the growth vs inflation tradeoff is most contested. In this zone, watch the core inflation trend to predict RBI's next move.

## Inflation regimes and equity sector rotation

| Inflation environment | Sectors that typically outperform | Sectors that typically underperform |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Rising inflation (CPI 6%+, climbing) | Energy, metals, commodities, agri-input companies, real assets | IT (high P/E compressed by rising discount rate), consumer discretionary (demand hurt) |
| High but stable inflation (5-6%) | FMCG with pricing power, banks (NIMs hold), energy | Auto (EMI costs high), real estate (rate-sensitive) |
| Falling inflation (4-5%, declining) | Banks (rate cut expectations), real estate, auto, capital goods | Commodity stocks (prices falling) |
| Low stable inflation (2-4%) | Broad market bull case | financials, IT, consumption, capex | Pure commodity plays (input cost advantage disappears) |

## The food inflation problem in India

    India's CPI basket has ~45% weight in food and beverages. This means one bad monsoon season can push CPI from 4% to 7% in a few months | entirely through food prices | even if the rest of the economy is healthy. This creates a peculiar situation: RBI is supposed to target inflation, but it can't control food prices through rate hikes.

    Rate hikes work by reducing demand for credit and slowing consumption. They don't make it rain more or fix supply chains. Hiking rates to control food inflation is like using a sledgehammer to fix a watch. RBI knows this | which is why it focuses heavily on core inflation when making long-run policy decisions, even if headline CPI is the official target.

      Inflation signals on RupeeCase

      RupeeCase's macro regime model tracks a rolling 3-month CPI trend. When CPI is above 5.5% and rising, the model flags a "high inflation regime" | in this regime, factor strategies historically show lower momentum and higher quality factor returns. The model shifts portfolio composition accordingly. When CPI is below 4.5% and falling, a "benign inflation regime" is flagged | momentum and growth strategies have historically performed better. Available at [invest.rupeecase.com](https://invest.rupeecase.com).

## Glossary

      Key terms | Module 7.3

      CPIConsumer Price Index | measures price changes from the household's perspective. India targets 4% CPI ±2%. Food and beverages ~45% of the basket. Published monthly by MoSPI.
      WPIWholesale Price Index | measures prices at factory/wholesale level. More volatile than CPI. A rising WPI-CPI spread signals manufacturer margin pressure.
      Core inflationCPI excluding food and fuel. Reflects structural, sticky price trends. RBI watches core inflation for long-run policy signals as food/fuel shocks are transitory.
      FIT frameworkFlexible Inflation Targeting | India's monetary policy framework since 2016. RBI must keep CPI at 4% (±2%). Breach for 3 quarters triggers a formal explanation to government.
      Cost-push inflationInflation caused by rising input costs (crude oil, commodities) passed through the supply chain. Cannot be easily controlled by rate hikes alone.

      TK

        A note from the author

        Why this matters

          Inflation is the silent killer of real returns, and in India the gap between CPI and WPI often tells a very different story than the headlines suggest. My own models started outperforming once I stopped treating inflation as a single number and began decomposing it into food, fuel, and core components. Understanding these nuances is what separates a naive allocation from a genuinely inflation-aware systematic portfolio.

          TK

            Tanmay Kurtkoti

            Founder & CEO, RupeeCase &middot; 17 years systematic trading &middot; QC Alpha

        RC

          **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.

      [Explore the terminal →](https://invest.rupeecase.com)

#### Sources & further reading

        * &#8594; [MoSPI | Consumer Price Index methodology and data](https://mospi.gov.in/consumer-price-index)

        * &#8594; [RBI | Report on Currency and Finance (inflation chapters)](https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/PublicationsView.aspx?id=17564)

        * &#8594; [NISM Series X-A | Investment Adviser (inflation and monetary policy)](https://www.nism.ac.in/resources/study-material/)

        Try the FIRE Calculator

        Model inflation-adjusted returns and see how different investment approaches protect your purchasing power.

      [Open Calculator →](/learn/tools.html#fire)

### Quick check, Module 7.3

        0 correct &middot; 0 answered

      ✓ Module complete! Next module unlocked.

        &#127881;

        Module 7.3 complete

        3 correct. Next up: Module 7.4, INR, FII Flows and Global Linkages.

      &#127891; Spread the knowledge

      This course is free. Help someone else learn about Inflation | Types, Measurement and Investment Impact, share it with one person who needs this.

        &#128203; Suggested LinkedIn post, copy & paste

        Just completed Module 7.3 of Tanmay Kurtkoti's free investing course on RupeeCase. Learning about Inflation | Types, Measurement and Investment Impact. Completely free at rupeecase.com/learn

        Copy text

        Share on X
        Post on LinkedIn
        Copy link

      RupeeCase Terminal

      Put this into practice

      Factor strategies, backtesting, portfolio analytics, systematic investing for Indian markets.

      [Try RupeeCase Terminal →](https://invest.rupeecase.com)

          Research Lab Qualifier

          Path 7, Module 3 of 8 done, complete all 8 + path test to unlock

        [Explore terminal →](https://invest.rupeecase.com)

      &#9989; 7.1→
      &#9989; 7.2→
      &#128205; 7.3 Inflation→
      7.4→
      7.5 → 7.8

      [← Previous](module-7-2-rbi-monetary-policy.html)

        Previous, Module 7.2

        Rbi Monetary Policy

Calculator

### Real Return Calculator
Fisher equation: real return is the actual purchasing power gain after inflation eats into nominal return.

Nominal return (%)Inflation rate (%)Years

    Quick check, Module 7.3

## 3 questions. Get 2 right to mark this module complete.

    0 of 3 answered

    &#10003;

    Module complete. Keep going.

        Up next, Module 7.4

        INR, FII Flows, and Global Market Linkages

        DXY correlation with Nifty, FII vs DII flow data, US Fed impact on Indian markets, rupee depreciation and export sector advantage.

      [Continue →](module-7-4-inr-fii-flows-global-linkages.html)

    PRACTICE WHAT YOU LEARNED
Try systematic strategies on RupeeCase | free paper trading.

[Get Started Free →](https://invest.rupeecase.com/signup)

      Related on RupeeCase

        [PodcastEP18: Crude shock at $102Mon 13 Apr, macro whiplash](/podcast/episodes/2026-04-13.html)
        [DailyFII vs Pro regime readMorning brief, 17 Apr](/daily/2026-04-17-pro-conviction-short-they-just-dumped-it.html)
        [CompareRegime filter vs plain indexSame universe, different rules](/compare/rupeecase-nifty-vs-nippon-nifty-etf.html)
        [StocksONGC crude-linked betaMacro-sensitive name](/stocks/ONGC.html)
      [StrategyEnergy BasketMacro thematic | crude beneficiaries | weekly rebal](/strategies/energy-basket.html)

      &#169; 2026 RupeeCase by QC Alpha &middot; [rupeecase.com](https://www.rupeecase.com) &middot; [All learning paths](https://www.rupeecase.com/learn)

      Newsletter

### What's working, what isn't.

      Strategy launches, monthly performance notes, and podcast calls that printed. Two or three emails a month. Built for people who actually read them.

        Subscribe

      By subscribing you agree to our [Privacy Policy](/privacy-policy.html). RupeeCase is not a SEBI registered Investment Adviser. Nothing in the newsletter is personalised investment advice.

      Built on India's regulated market infrastructure

        NSE
Order routing

        BSE
Backup venue

        SEBI
Markets regulator

        NISM
Certified author

    [About](/about.html).
    [Pricing](/pricing.html).
    [Risk Profile](/risk-profile.html).
    [Tools](/learn/tools.html).
    [Blog](/blog/).
    [Track Record](/track-record.html).
    [Sitemap](/sitemap.html)

    [Privacy Policy](/privacy-policy.html).
    [Terms](/terms.html).
    [Disclaimers](/disclaimers.html).
    [Grievance](/grievance.html)

  RupeeCase is brought to you by Tanmay Kurtkoti.

  [Sign In](https://invest.rupeecase.com/login)
  [Get Started](https://invest.rupeecase.com/signup)
