Fitch cuts India growth forecast for FY20 to 6.8%
New Delhi: Fitch Ratings on Friday cut India's GDP growth forecast for the next fiscal to 6.8 per cent from 7 per cent estimated earlier on weaker than expected economic momentum.
In its latest Global Economic Outlook, Fitch also slashed GDP growth forecast for current fiscal ending March 2019 to 6.9 per cent from 7.2 per cent projected in the December edition.
The 6.9 per cent estimate is a notch lower than 7 per cent growth estimated by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) for the current fiscal. Indian economy grew 7.2 per cent in 2017-18 fiscal.
"While we have cut our growth forecasts for the next fiscal year (FY20, ending March 2020) on weaker than expected momentum, we still see Indian GDP growth to hold up reasonably well at 6.8 per cent followed by 7.1 per cent in FY21," Fitch said.
The rating agency said, India's GDP growth softened for the second consecutive quarter in the October-December period at 6.6 per cent after clocking a growth of 7 per cent and 8 per cent in July-September and April-June periods, respectively.
"The slowdown has been driven by cooling activity growth in the manufacturing sector and, to a lesser extent, agriculture.
Weaker momentum has been mainly domestically driven," Fitch said. It said, credit availability has tightened up in areas heavily dependent on non-bank financial companies (NBFCs), such as autos and two-wheelers, where sales have dropped.
Also, food inflation has been muted and fell into negative territory late last year, weighing on farmers' incomes.
According to Fitch rupee is expected to weaken to 72 to a $ by the end of December 2019, and further to 73 by December 2020, from 69.82 to a $ in end December 2018. It said, fiscal and monetary policies are becoming more growth friendly and RBI adopted a dovish stance and cut interest rates by 0.25 per cent last month.
"We have changed our rate outlook and we now expect another 25bp cut in 2019, amid protracted below target inflation and easier global monetary conditions than previously envisaged," Fitch said.