Prakash Sakpal, Economist at ING, notes that after a brief hiatus, India’s currency slide resumed today despite new measures to stem the rupee (INR) depreciation.
Key Quotes
“At the start of trading today, the INR reversed almost all its gains against the US dollar, which had been eked out in the last two trading sessions in anticipation of some significant action from the government and the RBI to stabilise the currency market.”
“Late Friday, the finance ministry announced measures including the relaxation of regulation of foreign borrowing up to $50 million by manufacturing companies for a year compared to the current minimum of three years, the scrapping of withholding tax on masala (INR-denominated) bonds, and a possible easing in the current 20% limit on foreign ownership of corporate bonds. Nothing more.”
“It’s hard to imagine these measures being immediately effective in curbing the currency depreciation, as the external payments situation remains on a deteriorating path.”
“The markets may start pricing in an aggressive Reserve Bank of India policy rate hike, as also implied by two-thirds of odds of the 50 basis point hike at the next meeting in early October. It wouldn’t come as a complete surprise to us. However, we remain sceptical that the RBI will follow that path, now that inflation is running in the lower half of the 2-6% inflation target.”
“We aren’t rushing to change our forecast of two more 25 basis point hikes at the October and December meetings, and a USD/INR rate of 73.5 by end-2018.”