Khaleej Times

Plunging politics, surging oil pressurise edgy rupee

- — IANS

mumbai — The prospects of a non-BJP government in Karnataka, along with persistent­ly high global crude oil prices are expected to further weaken the Indian rupee, say experts.

“Developmen­ts in Karnataka is not going to have any lasting adverse impact on the rupee bit come Monday, but there is a risk of a knee-jerk sell-off in the INR against the USD,” Anindya Banerjee, deputy vice-president for Currency and Interest Rates with Kotak Securities, told IANS.

“Rupee continues to weaken against the US dollar as outflows continue across the emerging markets. However, high oil prices and political risk premium in a pre-election year is ensuring that the rupee remains as an underperfo­rmer in the EM basket.

“Add to the high oil prices, and we have the risk of the INR heading towards 69 levels against the USD. For the next week, we can see a range of 67.60-68.50 on spot,” added Banerjee.

Last week, the Indian rupee weakened by 68 paise to close at 68.01 against the US dollar from its previous close of 67.33 per greenback.

Lately, geo-political tensions in the Middle East and supply side constraint­s have led to a surge in global crude oil prices. The latest Brent crude price hovered around the $80 per barrel mark.

On May 18, the Finance Ministry estimated that the rise in oil prices may inflate India’s import bill by around $25 billion to $50 billion. The surge has already pushed the cost of petrol in the national capital to ₹75.32 per litre.

Besides oil prices, continueou­s outflows of foreign funds from the Indian equity markets has adversely impact the rupee’s value.

In terms of investment­s, provisiona­l figures from the stock exchanges showed that foreign institutio­nal investors sold scrips worth ₹14.96 billion during the trade week ended May 18.

 ?? — Reuters ?? The rise in oil prices may inflate India’s import bill by $25 billion to $50 billion.
— Reuters The rise in oil prices may inflate India’s import bill by $25 billion to $50 billion.

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