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A shopkeeper measures out a quantity of sugar at the wholesale market of old Delhi. Services make up about 55 per cent of India’s $1.3 trillion economy. Image Credit: Bloomberg

Mumbai: India's services industry growth cooled in August for a second month after climbing to a two-year high in June, a survey of purchasing executives showed.

The HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics purchasing managers' index fell to 59.3 from 61.7 in July, according to an emailed report yesterday. A reading above 50 indicates an expansion. The index was at 64 in June.

Strength

"Service sector activity, which in India accounts for the bulk of economic output, slowed a little last month," Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economic research at HSBC, said in the report. "But monetary officials can hardly afford to relax their guard. Growth remains strong."

The services gauge expanded for a 16th straight month in August, indicating consumer demand is holding up in Asia's third-largest economy.

Economists including Barclays Plc's Rahul Bajoria expect the Reserve Bank of India to raise rates for the fifth time this year after the economy expanded 8.8 per cent last quarter, the fastest pace in 2 1/2 years, stoking inflation.

"The Reserve Bank of India will remain focused on controlling inflation," Singapore-based Bajoria, said before the report.

He expects the RBI to boost rates by a quarter-point in the next monetary policy announcement on September 16.

India's benchmark wholesale-price inflation rate has stayed around or above 10 per cent since January. Food-price inflation accelerated to 10.86 per cent in the week to August 21 from 10.05 per cent the previous week, according to a statement from the commerce ministry today.

The Reserve Bank's reverse repurchase rate is 4.5 per cent and the repurchase rate is 5.75 per cent.

Ten-year government bond yields fell 2 basis points to 7.96 per cent at 11:40a.m. in Mumbai.

The Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensitive Index was little changed at 18,252.73.

Services make up about 55 per cent of India's $1.3 trillion (Dh4.7 trillion) economy.

Rising demand for mobile phones and bank loans provides evidence of growing consumption in the South Asian nation.

Bank lending grew 20.14 per cent in the two weeks to August 13.