The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

India’s dollar buyer may step back as capital inflows plunge

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MUMBAI: Traders counting on the Reserve Bank of India to keep buying dollars may have to think again.

The central bank bought US$36bil of foreign exchange in the 12 months to January, seeking to stem the rupee’s appreciati­on.

That’s likely to change given India’s widening current-account deficit and slowing capital inflows, with Rabobank saying the RBI may instead look to use some of its US$420bil of reserves to plug the dollar spending gap.

India is losing some of its red-hot appeal to foreign investors as a bank scandal, a widening fiscal deficit and the prospects of faster rate hikes by the Federal Reserve erode the allure of its higher-yielding assets. The rupee is the second-worst performing currency in Asia and global funds have turned net sellers of its bonds this year.

“A sudden stop of inflows would lead to declining FX reserves in 2018,” said Hugo Erken, a Utrecht-based senior economist at Rabobank Internatio­nal. “We could be looking at a shortage of US$18bil to cover finance requiremen­ts.”

Foreigners have offloaded US$405mil of bonds this year, while equity inflows have slowed to US$1.5bil. Global funds bought a combined US$11.2bil of equities and debt in the first quarter of 2017.

“It’s hard to imagine strong flows in 2018 into India if you put together the combinatio­n of global and domestic headwinds,” said Shashank Mendiratta, an economist at ANZ in Bengaluru. RBI’s interventi­on to cap rupee gains will “likely taper off over the next few months,” he said.

As the rupee advanced 6.4% in 2017, the RBI was a net buyer of dollars for almost every month. It also purchased US$7.4bil this January, according to recent data. The currency’s 2.4% decline from the start of February suggests the trend may turn.

India’s financing requiremen­ts will keep the rupee vulnerable to rising U.S. rates this year, especially if the hikes weigh on global equities, according to a Tuesday note from DBS Bank Ltd. It expects the rupee to decline toward 67 to a dollar this year. The currency is trading at 65.18 at 12:07 pm in Mumbai.

The nation’s current-account deficit widened to US$13.5bil in the October quarter as oil prices surged, almost doubling from the US$7.2bil gap in the previous three months, according to RBI data last Friday.

The risk of much wider current-account deficits, driven partly by higher oil prices, will increase the importance of portfolio flows, said Hamish Pepper, head of forex and emerging market-macro strategy for Asia at Barclays Bank Plc in Singapore.

“It will likely require a cheaper INR exchange value than we thought earlier this year, given heightened political and macroecono­mic risks,” said Pepper. “Equity flows will be critical, given near-exhausted foreign portfolio investment in debt limits.” Still, dipping into RBI’s reserves to sell dollars will be easier said than done.

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