Since February 2019, the RBI has reduced the repo rates by 110bps. The CPI inflation during this period remained in the range of 2.57-3.21 per cent. However, the recent CPI inflation number for September 2019 rose to a 14-month high of 3.99 per cent, driven by a sharp rise in prices of food articles. The spurt in food prices may be temporary, owing to a seasonal trend and uneven spread of monsoon. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) has a legislated mandate to keep headline inflation close to 4 per cent(+/- 2 per cent) on a durable basis. The question that behoves us now is, “Will the RBI have enough room to reduce the rates further?”