Khaleej Times

Indian rupee set to stabilise against dollar

- Issac John

dubai — After a roller coaster ride during the past several months, the Indian rupee is poised to stabilise into the short to medium term on the back of a steady uptick in foreign inflows, de-escalation in border tensions, easing crude prices and brisk buying in domestic equities, forex analysts said.

The rupee turned positive for 2019 on Tuesday against the dollar as foreign investors continued to buy in equities and debt ahead of general elections. The rupee was trading at 69.71 a dollar (18.99 against a UAE dirham), up 0.24 per cent from its previous close of 69.89 (19.94 against the dirham). The home currency opened at 69.75 a dollar and touched a high of 69.69.

Currency experts said so far this year, rupee has gained 0.15 per cent. Since the start of the March, foreign investors have bought Indian equities worth $833.26 million and debt worth $586 million respective­ly.

According to the latest stock market data, year to date, foreign institutio­nal investors have bought Indian equities worth $3.13 billion and sold $1 billion in debt market.

Vijay Valecha, chief market analyst, Century Financial, said the gaining momentum by the

ruling party in upcoming national elections along with improved corporate fundamenta­ls are strengthen­ing the rupee and the rally is likely to continue in the short term.

“The recent rise in border tensions has turned the tide in the favour of ruling party and improved the ratings of Prime Minister Narendra Modi which is likely to translate into political continuity,” he said.

Valecha said investors hate uncertaint­y of a coalition and prefer continuity of the current regime. Also, Indian equity benchmark Nifty 50 is expected to show an earnings growth of 18-20 per cent for FY20 supported by turnaround in banking sector and this should attract more foreign fund flows. “This should propel the Indian rupee higher and DirhamINR is likely to decline to 18.60 in the coming week.

Analysts said investor confidence on domestic assets is steadily rising with the easing of geopolitic­al tensions and favourable fundamenta­ls as major worries like higher oil prices and emerging market weaknesses are now things of the past. However, some analysts are of the view that the currency could come under pressure after US President Donald Trump appeared to open a new front in his trade wars with a plan to end preferenti­al trade treatment for India.

The rupee, the worst-performing currency in 2018 with a decline of 8.46 per cent to a lifetime low of 74.48 against the dollar in October, lost 0.62 per cent against the dollar between February 13 and 27 as border tension escalated but gained 0.72 per cent for the full month.

However, according to strategist­s at Morgan Stanley, who’ve told clients to sell the Indian rupee, the currency could fall further against the dollar and British pound over the coming months.

Morgan Stanley analysts argue that the rupee would depreciate due to a range of factors and are targeting a move up to 74.60 in the three-month non-deliverabl­e-forward rate for USD/ INR over the coming months.

The Reserve Bank of India cut its interest rate in February, citing improvemen­ts in the inflation outlook. Interest rate cuts are almost always bad for a currency because they reduce or worsen the relative-rate differenti­al between one currency and another, currency experts said. Analysts said traders would now watch consumer price inflation data for February to cement a growing possibilit­y of a rate cut in the April monetary policy. CPI probably quickened to 2.4 per cent year on year last month from 2.05 per cent in January, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists.

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