India hopes to cut losses from rupee fall
India believes the current slide in the rupee will not be prolonged as it has adequate “firepower” of foreign exchange reserves to deal with the current volatility, a senior finance ministry official said.
The volatility is being driven by global factors, including proposed US sanctions on Iran and the mismatch in demand and supply of oil, said Subhash Chandra Garg, the economic affairs secretary in the finance ministry.
Policy makers are also worried that the ongoing trade war between the United States and China could adversely impact exports from emerging market economies, including India, while discouraging capital inflows - putting pressure on the rupee.
The rupee is down 6.85 percent so far this year, making it the worst performing currency in Asia, followed closely by the Philippine peso.
The depreciating rupee and a widening trade deficit pose a challenge for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is aiming to boost economic growth ahead of national elections, due early next year. Besides using reserves, economists said the Reserve Bank of India, which hiked rates in May by 25 basis points to mark the first tightening in over four years, could raise rates again.
“We could see a couple of rate hikes in the current monetary cycle,” said N. R. Bhanumurthy, an economist at the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, a Delhi-based think tank.
However, he added a further hike in the key repo rate could squeeze credit for companies as well as lead to some cuts in capital spending by the government - dragging down economic growth. “We may not be able to achieve even 7 percent growth this fiscal (year),” he said. India's financial year ends on March 31.
The partially convertible rupee fell to a record low of 69.0950 per dollar on Thursday and was trading at 68.60/61 per dollar at 0610 GMT on Friday. New Delhi feels that with forex reserves amounting to $410 billion as of June 15, it could deal with the current storm. “We have adequate reserves, there is adequate firepower,” Garg said.
But reserves are already down from their record high of $426.08 billion as of April 13, prompting traders to believe a large part of this decline has been due to dollar sales by the central bank to prop up the currency in recent months.
“Although not obvious, the RBI seems to be instrumental in rescuing (the) rupee from its low of 69.10 to current prices,” said Pritam Kumar Patnaik, Business Head at Reliance Commodities. “We expect them to keep participating as and when the rupee falls below the 69 to a dollar level.”
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