Khaleej Times

Is RBI more tolerant with rupee?

- Subhadip Sircar and Kartik Goyal

mumbai — The Reserve Bank of India’s muted response to this week’s surge in the rupee suggests policy makers have grown more tolerant of currency gains.

While the central bank was said to have purchased dollars in each of the past three days, the interventi­on has been far less aggressive given the currency’s move, according to FirstRand and RBL Bank. The reason: dollar-buying will boost rupee liquidity at a time when India’s banking system is already flooded with cash, thus threatenin­g to stoke inflation and jeopardise RBI Governor Urjit Patel’s monetary policy.

“The RBI is possibly allowing the rupee to appreciate with the aim of controllin­g imported inflation,” said Paresh Nayar, Mumbai-based head of currency and money markets at the local unit of FirstRand. “Its less aggressive interventi­on is also guided by the fact that it wants to prevent too much money sloshing in the banking system.”

Indian banks had about ₹5.1 trillion ($77.8 billion) in surplus funds as of Wednesday, according to the Bloomberg Intelligen­ce India Banking Liquidity Index, close to the record ₹5.5 trillion on March 6. That’s after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s shocking November decision to ban high-value currency notes saw citizens rush to banks to deposit the defunct bills.

The rupee weakened 0.2 per cent to 65.5575 per dollar on Friday, after climbing two per cent in the previous four days, with much of the advance coming after Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party Saturday won a majority of seats in the key Uttar Pradesh state. The victory is seen emboldenin­g him to undertake more economic reforms and lure foreign funds to India.

“The central bank might be wary of intervenin­g aggressive­ly to slow the rupee’s ascent, apart from its presence on ad-hoc basis to contain volatility,” Radhika Rao, Singapore-based economist at DBS Bank, wrote in a report on Thursday. “These observatio­ns are also backed by the smaller rise in foreign reserves in February and the rupee emerging as amongst the best performers in the region against the US dollar.”

Deutsche Bank and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group are among global lenders to raise their end-2017 rupee forecasts after Modi’s win. Both now estimate the Indian currency at about 67.5 per dollar by December 31, with Deutsche upping its view from 70 earlier, while ANZ raising it from 69.5.

“The RBI has been intervenin­g in both the directions to keep forex volatility low, but this week the central bank allowed a greater volatility in the currency, which led the rupee to breach the 66 mark on the downside,” Kaushik Das, Mumbai-based senior economist at Deutsche Bank, wrote in a report dated March 16. While the rupee may gain further in the short term, it will be difficult to sustain those levels and the currency will likely start “mean-reverting” from the next quarter, he wrote.

Consumer prices in India rose 3.65 per cent in February after easing for six consecutiv­e months as food costs climbed. A panel led by Patel last month signalled an end to the monetary-easing cycle.

Interventi­on via the forwards market is one way the central bank could look to curb currency gains without having to worry about boosting banking liquidity.

Under this method, the RBI typically enters into sell-buy swaps with banks, whereby it sells the dollars bought in the spot market and simultaneo­usly offsets the position by buying dollars in the forwards market. This pushes back the liquidity injection to a future date.

“The central bank could be using the forwards interventi­on strategy,” said Rohan Lasrado, head of forex trading at RBL Bank in Mumbai.

The RBI has maintained it doesn’t target a specific rupee level and intervenes only to curb undue volatility in the currency market. — Bloomberg

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 ?? Reuters ?? The RBI could allow the rupee to appreciate with the aim of controllin­g imported inflation. —
Reuters The RBI could allow the rupee to appreciate with the aim of controllin­g imported inflation. —

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