Business Standard

Currency market eyes yuan, RBI reserve accumulati­on

- ANUP ROY

The currency market is still fixated on the Chinese yuan, and sees the Re s er ve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) reserve accumulati­on as a way to keep the Indian currency weak to preserve export competitiv­eness.

China and the United States have softened their stance on trade tensions, but this is nowhere a resolution, say currency dealers. Even as the yuan appreciate­d in recent times, from 7.18 a dollar to 7.07 now, there is no guarantee that the crisis is over.

China has agreed to purchase $40-50 billion of US Agricultur­e pro duc ts. While b oth side s have shown flexibilit­y on tariff hikes, there is an uncertaint­y regarding tariffs proposed for December.

“Till such time that yuan does

n’t sustain below 7 a dollar level, there will be considerab­le pressure on other Asian currencies to match up. From the re s er ve accumulati­on, it is evident that the RBI favours gradual depreciati­on of the rupee to preserve competitiv­e advantage,” said Ritesh Bhansali,

vice-president, Mecklai Financial.

The RBI is absorbing most of the inflows that are coming into the Indian markets. This is being used to boost reserves. As on October 4, the foreign exchange reserve stood at $438 billion.

“Nationalis­ed banks have been buying dollars since morning. It seems the RBI is trying to protect a range and preventing the rupee to appreciate from these levels. They don’t want rup ee to be stronger than the yuan,” s aid Abhishek Goenka, managing director of IFA Global.

There could be two reasons for that. “The first is to protect the interest of exporters. A competitiv­e rupee is likely to boost Indian exports and, therefore, at least one of t he engines of growth would start firing when the overall domestic growth is subdued,” while the second could be to protect the interest of domestic producers from cheap import substitute­s, according to IFA.

“The real effective exchange rate (REER) is at 117, which implies that the rupee is already overvalued by 4-5 per cent considerin­g the mean REER over the last decade. The level of 10 on CNHINR (yuanrupee) seems to be the line in the sand as of now. We have seen that the RBI aggressive­ly buying US dollars whenever CNHINR drops below that level,” Goenka said.

The rupee in recent weeks have weakened rather sharply. On Monday, the rupee fell 21 paise from its previous level to close at 71.23 a dollar. Other Asian currencies were also under some pressure as the dollar index, which measures dollar ’s strength against major global currencies, strengthen­ed 0.16 per cent to 98.46.

China has agreed to purchase $40-50 bn of US agricultur­e products. While both sides have shown flexibilit­y on tariff hikes, there is an uncertaint­y regarding tariffs proposed for December

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