July 13 (Reuters) – India’s retail inflation accelerated to 4.38% in June, government data showed on Monday, breaching the central bank’s 4% target for the first time in 16 months and setting the stage for an interest rate hiking cycle.
COMMENTARY:
SAKSHI GUPTA, PRINCIPAL ECONOMIST, HDFC BANK, GURUGRAM
“Inflation inched up by close to 45 basis points in June to 4.4%, mainly driven by some increase in food and fuel inflation as the impact of a revision in petrol and diesel prices played out. However, lower gold prices pulled down the increase in the headline print.
The uncertainty over the West Asia conflict along with an uneven monsoon continues to cast a shadow over the inflation outlook. We continue to estimate inflation to average at 5.2% for FY27, assuming an average oil price of $80 pbl.”
UPASNA BHARDWAJ, CHIEF ECONOMIST, KOTAK MAHINDRA BANK, MUMBAI
“The inflation data continues its uptrend, with much of the increase being led by higher food prices and partial impact of the pass through of the fuel price hike. We continue to monitor the progress on rains and the likely uptick on food prices, alongside the recent revival in geopolitical tensions. We continue to expect 50 bps of rate hike in H2 FY27.”
VIKRAM CHHABRA, SENIOR ECONOMIST, 360 ONE ASSET, MUMBAI
“Despite the June 2026 inflation print coming in above market expectations, the inflation outlook has become more benign over the past month. This has been supported by a sharper-than-expected decline in crude oil prices, while early July rainfall has partially offset the steep June monsoon deficit.
That said, the inflation trajectory remains vulnerable to surprises, given the ongoing risk from the West Asia conflict and the monsoon still tracking below normal. Our base case currently expects inflation to average around 5% in FY27, which should give the RBI room to remain on pause at the August policy meeting and await greater clarity on the growth–inflation trade-off before deciding its next move.”
RADHIKA RAO, SENIOR ECONOMIST, DBS Bank, SINGAPORE
“June inflation was slightly above consensus, on continued normalisation in food segments and pass-through of increase in pump prices undertaken in mid-May.
Markets are also focused on the spatial and geographical spread of ongoing southwest monsoon. While policymakers will remain vigilant to weather and geopolitical risks, the lack of discernible spillovers to demand should limit any market tendency to frontload rate hike expectations.”
DIPTI DESHPANDE, SENIOR DIRECTOR AND PRINCIPAL ECONOMIST, CRISIL LTD, MUMBAI
“India’s retail inflation crossed the 4% mark for the first time since January 2025, with Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation rising to 4.4% in June from 3.9% in May.
Looking ahead, uneven rainfall so far, a below-normal monsoon forecast, and the onset of El Niño conditions could put pressure on food prices.
Crisil Intelligence also expects Brent crude prices to average $82–87 per barrel this fiscal. Higher domestic fuel prices are also likely to exert broader inflationary pressure as rising input and transportation costs are passed through the economy.
It is also important to note that the disinflationary support from GST rationalisation measures is likely to persist only until the end of the current quarter.
Given these pressures, Crisil expects CPI inflation to firm up over the coming months and average 5.1% this fiscal, compared with 2.0% last fiscal.”
(Reporting by Saikeerthi, Chandini Monappa, Nishit Navin and Anuran Sadhu, compliled by Abinaya V; Editing by Sonia Cheema)







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