Khaleej Times

Indian tech giants worried about this

- Nupur Acharya

mumbai — Just six months ago, Indian companies and policy makers were grappling with a record-low exchange rate. Now, the rupee’s unexpected rebound is causing fresh problems.

While the currency’s 5.9 per cent jump against the dollar so far this year will help tamp down inflation, it’s posing a challenge for the earnings of India’s exporters. For informatio­n technology and drug companies already contending with an American clampdown on working visas and a wave of unfavorabl­e inspection­s by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion, it’s another headache.

Tata Consultanc­y Services, India’s biggest IT firm, was taken aback by the rupee’s rebound, chief executive officer Rajesh Gopinathan said on an earnings call last month. While at least one senior Indian government official has flagged concerns about the currency’s strength, there’s little sign yet that the central bank is prepared to halt the rupee’s march.

That’s posing a threat to companies that garner most of their earnings overseas, including IT exporters Tata, Infosys and Wipro, which all get more than 90 per cent of revenue from abroad, and drugmakers Sun Pharmaceut­icals Industries and Lupin, with ratios above 70 per cent. All of those five companies apart from Lupin fell on Monday even as the Sensex gauge rose. “The sharp appreciati­on of the rupee is a matter of concern,” said Rakesh Tarway, head of research at Reliance Securities in Mumbai. “We’re recommendi­ng investors tread with caution and be selective in the IT sector given the global headwinds and also the currency spike.”

Earnings for technology companies that have already reported March-quarter earnings have been weak, according to Deutsche Bank. Net income increased an average two per cent and revenue rose three per cent, the brokerage said in a note released on May 10.

Powering the rupee’s rally has been India’s high bond yields and an an economy that expanded more than seven per cent in 2016, making it an investor favourite amid this year’s emerging-market rally. A thumping win for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party in key state elections in March spurred bets for more economic reforms, further adding to the nation’s allure.

Overseas investors have pumped about $15 billion into India’s bonds and stocks this year, driving the rupee to a 20-month high in late April. That prompted a warning from Arvind Subramania­n, chief economic adviser to the finance ministry, who said on April 29 that the currency’s strength was hurting exports and India needs to ensure the exchange rate remains competitiv­e.

The RBI doesn’t appear to share his view. The central bank seems to be allowing rupee appreciati­on to offset looser financial conditions, said Claudio Piron, the co-head of Asian currency and rates strategy at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in Singapore.

An advance in the rupee to 62 a dollar, 3.4 per cent stronger than the current spot rate, could shave four per cent off the NSE Nifty 50 Index’s earnings growth, Prateek Parekh, an analyst at Edelweiss Securities, wrote in an April 17 report. Most analysts think the currency will weaken by year-end, with 66.46 a dollar the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.

While exports jumped 27.6 per cent in March from a year earlier, Reliance’s Tarway doesn’t think the currency impact will start showing up in company earnings until the current quarter.

Each one per cent upward move in the rupee against the dollar will erode the margins of Indian IT exporters by 25-30 basis points, he said. — Bloomberg

 ?? Reuters ?? any non-action to the rupee’s surge may threaten indian it firms’ earnings, mostly which comes from abroad. —
Reuters any non-action to the rupee’s surge may threaten indian it firms’ earnings, mostly which comes from abroad. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates