Indian government bonds fell on Thursday as traders turned cautious ahead of the Reserve Bank of India's rate decision due Friday, with rising oil prices driven by escalating geopolitical tensions adding a fresh layer of uncertainty to an already close call.
Markets are broadly pricing in a pause from the RBI, signaling that most traders expect the central bank to hold its benchmark rate steady. But a meaningful cluster of forecasters disagrees. Standard Chartered, Capital Economics, ANZ, MUFG, and OCBC are all calling for a 25-basis-point rate hike, keeping the outcome genuinely contested.
Why the Oil Move Matters Here
War-related risk has pushed oil prices higher, and that matters directly for India. The country imports the vast majority of its crude oil, so any sustained rise in global prices feeds quickly into domestic fuel costs, transport, and eventually consumer prices broadly. Higher inflation gives the RBI more reason to raise rates rather than pause.
Bond prices move inversely to yields. When traders expect rate hikes, or fear inflation will stay elevated, they sell bonds, pushing prices down and yields up. Thursday's slip in bond prices reflects exactly that logic: the combination of a hawkish minority view among major banks and an oil-driven inflation risk made holding bonds less attractive heading into the decision.
A 25-basis-point hike, if it materialized, would directly raise borrowing costs for the government, companies, and households. It would also signal that the RBI sees inflation as not yet fully under control, which could prompt a repricing of bonds further out on the yield curve.
What to Watch on Friday
The split between market consensus and the forecasts from Standard Chartered, Capital Economics, ANZ, MUFG, and OCBC means Friday's announcement carries real surprise risk in either direction. A hold would likely steady bond markets and could bring some relief to yields. A hike would validate the hawkish camp and push yields higher, raising the cost of fresh government and corporate borrowing.
Oil prices remain the wild card beyond the immediate decision. If geopolitical tensions keep crude elevated, the inflation outlook for India stays complicated regardless of what the RBI does on Friday. That would keep pressure on bonds in the sessions that follow, even if the short-term reaction to a pause is positive.
For now, bond traders are doing what they typically do in the final hours before a major central bank decision: reducing exposure and waiting. The RBI's statement and any guidance on the future rate path will matter as much as the rate decision itself.