Forex reserves vault over $600-b mark

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India’s foreign exchange (forex) reserves crossed the important milestone of $600 billion, aided by a whopping $6.842 billion jump in the reserves in the week ended June 4, 2021.

As on June 4, 2021, India’s reserves stood at $605 billion. The increase in reserves in the reporting week came mainly on the back of foreign currency assets (FCA) soaring by $7.362 billion.

FCA comprise multi-currency assets that are held in multi-asset portfolios (investment in securities, deposits with other central banks & BIS, and deposits with commercial banks overseas).

The other three components of the reserves, however, declined: Gold (by $502 million), Special Drawing Rights ($1 million) and Reserve Position in the IMF ($16 million).

During the calendar year so far, the reserves rose 32 per cent year-on-year (or by $103.305 billion vs. 78.149 billion in the year ago period).

In a recent press meet, Governor Shaktikanta Das said emerging market economies have to build up their own buffers and RBI is no exception to that.

Foreign investment inflows

State Bank of India’s Economic Research Department, in its report “Ecowrap”, said that India witnessed a record amount of foreign investment inflows into equity markets which supported the rupee. The report emphasised that due to the volatile nature of inflows, they increase the possibility of a currency getting hammered once sentiments start turning sour.

“This is especially true for developing market currencies. Sell-off pressures are only warded off when there are ample foreign reserves with the central bank of the said economy.

“Thus, the Reserve Bank intervened in the forex market through operations in the onshore/offshore OTC (over-the-counter) and exchange traded currency derivatives (ETCD) segments in order to maintain orderly market conditions by containing excessive volatility in the exchange rate and accumulating sizeable reserves as ammunition,” said Soumya Kanti Ghosh Group Chief Economic Adviser.

Brickwork Ratings, in its report “Drishtikone”, attributed the record level of forex reserves to huge foreign portfolio investment inflows into domestic equity markets in FY21.

“A risk-off by foreign investors due to the prevailing uncertainty on domestic economic recovery already led to capital outflows in April and May.

Exchange rate volatility

“The exchange rate volatility demands more forex interventions by the RBI. Hence, the accumulation of forex reserves helps the RBI to maintain the exchange rate at a comfortable level and also deal with external spillovers,” the report said.

CRISIL Research, in a report, observed that record high forex reserves, and foreign investor inflows owing to interest rate differential between India and global economies, will also prop up the rupee.

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Top rupee-bond banker says time for Indian firms to issue, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian companies should use the current yields which are at multi-year lows to raise long-term funding, according to the nation’s biggest rupee bond arranger since 2007.

“The market levels are absolutely fantastic, absolute yields are quite low at multi-year lows, spreads are quite tight,” Neeraj Gambhir, group executive and head – treasury, markets and wholesale banking products at Axis Bank Ltd., said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “Our suggestion to borrowers is that current market scenario is very good and if they need long-term funding they should be accessing the markets.”

Companies borrowed an unprecedented 9.8 trillion rupees ($134.4 billion) through domestic bonds in the fiscal year ended March as they build up cash buffers to tide over the pandemic. The average yield on top-rated two-year rupee corporate notes fell 15 basis points on Tuesday to 4.63 per cent, the biggest decline since May 17. Notes touched a record low of 3.84 per cent in April.

India’s central bank will probably need to buy 3-4 trillion rupees of sovereign bonds this fiscal year to support the government’s borrowing program, Gambhir said. He expects the benchmark 10-year yield to remain near the 6 per cent mark in the ‘foreseeable future.’

The rupee is likely to remain around current levels and unlikely to depreciate immediately, Gambhir said.

“The strength of the rupee is reflective of the dollar weakness particularly against EM currencies and I don’t expect it to reverse in a meaningful way anytime in the near term,” he said.

The rupee was trading down 0.2 per cent to 73 a dollar on Wednesday.



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Most Indian companies have protections to limit effect of currency fluctuations: Moody’s

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Moody’s Investors Service on Thursday said sustained weakening of the Indian rupee against the dollar will be credit negative for rated Indian companies that generate revenue in rupees but rely heavily on US-dollar debt to fund operations and thus have significant dollar-based costs.

However, the global credit rating agency expects that the negative credit implications will be limited.

Rupee view: INR positive as Fed maintains status quo

The observation comes in the backdrop of the Indian rupee closing around 74.66 against the US dollar on April 27, 2021, or about 3 per cent lower than levels in mid-March. The rupee has fallen over 15 per cent since January 2018, Moody’s said in a note.

“Most companies have protections to limit the effect of currency fluctuations. These include natural hedges, where companies generate revenue in US dollars or have contracts priced in US dollars; some US dollar revenue and financial hedges; or a combination of these factors to help limit the strain on cash flow and leverage, even under a more severe deprecation scenario,” said Annalisa Di Chiara, Senior Vice-President.

Rupee extends gains for second day; closes up by 7 paise at 74.66 against dollar

As a result, weaker credit metrics under a scenario in which the rupee depreciates a further 15 per cent against the dollar can be accommodated in the companies’ current rating levels.

Covid impact

Moody’s observed that refinancing risk associated with US dollar debt over the next 18 months also appears manageable, as most companies are well-known in the markets as repeat issuers and others are government-owned or government-linked entities with good access to the capital markets.

The agency noted that India is reporting new record daily increases in coronavirus infections, prompting new lockdowns and restrictive measures to curb the spread of the pandemic and raising concerns on their impact on the country’s pace of economic recovery.

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Rupee plunges to 9-month low of 75.05 against the dollar

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The rupee depreciated further on Monday to cross 75 against the dollar mark, spooked by the likely adverse impact of the second wave of Covid-19 pandemic on economic recovery and unfavourable effects of surplus liquidity in the financial system.

The currency unit opened at 74.97 to the dollar, about 24 paise weaker against the previous close. The rupee crossed the 75 mark for the first time in about nine months, depreciating to a low of 75.145. Intra-day, it also tested a high of 74.78. It closed weaker at 75.055 to the dollar, down about 33 paise over the previous close of 74.73.

CARE Ratings, in a report, observed that the Reserve Bank of India’s policy of providing even more liquidity to the system through the Government Securities Acquisition Plan, though positive for the bond market (where yields have softened by 5-8 basis poinys), is not so for the currency.

“There is now excess liquidity of ₹7-lakh crore in the reverse repo basket and there will be an infusion of ₹25,000 crore on the 15th of this month. So much liquidity in the system is not good news for the rupee…,” CARE said.

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Rupee slips below 75/$ level in early trade ahead of key macroeconomic data release

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The rupee opened on a weak note and fell below the 75 per US dollar level in early trade on Monday amid lacklustre opening in domestic equities ahead of the release of key macro-economic data.

Moreover, rising crude oil prices, foreign fund outflows, spiking Covid-19 cases and heavy selling in domestic equities weighed on the domestic currency.

At the interbank foreign exchange market, the rupee opened at 74.97, then lost further ground and fell to 75.14 against the US dollar, showing a decline of 41 paise over its previous closing.

The Indian rupee, on Friday, had closed at 74.73 against the US dollar.

The rupee started on a weak note against the US dollar weighed by the inflationary pressures on the economy ahead of the data release tonight, Reliance Securities said.

Meanwhile, India hit a new coronavirus infection record with 1,68,912 new cases, the highest single-day rise so far, taking the total tally of cases to 1,35,27,717, according to official data.

Meanwhile, Brent crude futures, the global oil benchmark, rose 0.05 per cent to $62.98 per barrel.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) remained net sellers in the capital markets, pulling out ₹653.51 crore on Friday, as per provisional data.

Domestic bourses opened on a weak note on Monday with benchmark indices Sensex trading 1,357.46 points down at 48,233.86 and Nifty down 402.35 points at 14,432.50.

Meanwhile, US consumer price data will be released on Tuesday, while investors will also await Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s speech on Wednesday at the Economic Club of Washington, the note said.

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India’s Central Bank Says ‘Boo.’ Carry Traders Faint

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“India joins the money printers.”

That’s how an ING Bank research note describes the Reserve Bank of India’s explicit commitment to buy ₹1 lakh crore ($14 billion) in government bonds this quarter. Since this new move has been given a fancy name — Government Securities Acquisition Program — it will probably both extend and expand.

Large-scale bond-buying and money-printing may result in a glut of rupees, causing them to depreciate against the dollar. Which is why the foreign-exchange market pushed the dollar 1.56% higher against the rupee, one of the largest one-day moves in the past decade.

Quantitative easing

Is this the start of quantitative easing? Robert Carnell, ING’s head of Asia-Pacific research, thinks so: “QE, once the preserve of reserve currency central banks, is now becoming pretty mainstream,” he writes. With its new program, India has “joined the ranks of Indonesia and the Philippines in Asia who have dabbled with this policy.”

 

Bond traders aren’t all so sure. The yardstick for a monetary bazooka is Mario Draghi’s “whatever it takes” moment at the European Central Bank in the summer of 2012, or Haruhiko Kuroda’s bold 2013 campaign at the Bank of Japan to end 15 years of deflation. RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das’s manoeuvre isn’t in the same league. It’s just a formal announcement of open market bond purchases the authority does on an ad hoc basis anyway. How can you get excited about $14 billion of debt-buying this quarter, when the preceding three months’ total was $20 billion?

Rather than chalking up the program as full-fledged quantitative easing, traders like Arvind Chari, chief investment officer at Quantum Advisors Pvt., are more comfortable calling it a yield-curve flattener, which should help the central bank manage a bloated government borrowing program. The benchmark 10-year yield has indeed shifted lower over the past two trading sessions.

Crowded carry trade

The fixed-income folks probably have it right: This isn’t the start of a new monetary policy regime. As for the massive move in the currency, Mumbai-based finance professor and Observatory Group analyst Ananth Narayan has a simple explanation. The carry trade in the Indian rupee has been getting crowded, he says.

These are bets where speculators borrow a low-yielding currency, such as the dollar, to buy a high-yielding emerging market currency. As long as what they’re buying (the rupee in this case) doesn’t drop like a stone, they come out ahead. A fall like Wednesday’s would scare them off and lead to an unwinding of positions, which in Narayan’s calculations had swelled in just five months through February to $40 billion.

What has been bringing carry traders to India, besides the chance to earn a three-month yield of 3.3%, by swapping into rupees the dollars they borrowed at the three-month Libor rate of less than 0.2%? Before Wednesday, they could be reasonably sure that the rupee, the best-performing emerging-market currency in the first quarter, would remain propped up by strong capital inflows: Overseas investors have ploughed $37 billion into India’s frothy equity market over the past year.

With inflation one percentage point above the mid-point of the central bank’s 2%-6% target range, and local savers grumbling about unremunerative deposits, there was little risk that the RBI would go down the path of adventurism. The opportunity for unconventional action was last year, when Bank Indonesia decided to directly fund its government’s fight against the coronavirus. Now markets are starting to expect the U.S. Federal Reserve to raise interest rates sooner than it has indicated so far, leading to a flight of capital from emerging markets.

This is a time for policy prudence and currency stability. Or that’s what the carry traders were betting.

They expected the RBI to gradually withdraw the $89 billion of surplus domestic liquidity in the banking system. The monetary authority had opened the floodgates last year to fill the cracks caused by Covid-19 dislocation. Since removing this excess by selling interest-bearing central bank paper would entail a visible fiscal expenditure, the RBI was doing it by converting some of its spot dollar purchases (which keep the rupee competitive for exports) into forward purchases, accompanied by spot dollar sales. The latter sucked out the rupee liquidity.

The implied rupee interest rate involved in this minor operation is much higher than the local money market rate, says Narayan, but it’s not a cost that has to be explicitly acknowledged. The message to carry traders was clear: Who wouldn’t want to buy a currency whose sole issuer wants them so severely as to implicitly pay a hefty premium to have them back for one year?

But then the RBI cried “boo” in a crowded room. Its bond-buying announcement came amid a sinister-looking resurgence of the pandemic that could drag out the recovery from last year’s harsh lockdown. New cases reported Thursday spiked to a daily record of more than 126,700, and vaccine stocks dwindled to three days in Maharashtra, the worst-affected state and home to Mumbai, India’s financial capital.

Moody’s Investors Service flagged this second wave as a risk to domestic air travel and of airport operators’ credit quality. ICRA Ltd., the local Moody’s affiliate, said a jump in infections could spook investors, making it more challenging for home financiers and other shadow banks to securitize retail assets. The banking system was in poor health even before the virus outbreak. Nonperforming loans this year could be at a 20-year high, Capital Economics says.

This sudden surge in economic uncertainty provided the RBI with elbow room to talk yields down. It took the chance and unveiled what’s billed as a big-ticket easing program, but in reality, it may be more water pistol than a bazooka. Carry traders got shocked, nonetheless.

People are so jumpy nowadays.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services.

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As FY21 concludes, rupee loses some of its sheen

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Driven by a rising greenback and possible dollar-purchases by nationalised banks, the rupee suddenly turned weak on Tuesday, slipping to an intra-day low of 73.46 against the dollar. On Wednesday, the rupee pared some of its losses from the previous day but continued trading below the 73 level, ending FY21 with gain of 3.3 per cent against the dollar.

Two days ago, the rupee was the best performer among its emerging markets peers and had been the only currency reflecting a positive return on a year-to-date (YTD) basis. The up-move was supported by strong foreign portfolio investor (FPI) inflows into equity markets as well as a possible pause in the Reserve Bank of India’s dollar-buying spree in the quarter.

A report by IFA Global said the nationalised banks were persistently on the bid, likely on behalf of the Reserve Bank of India. ‘Correcting recent rupee over-valuation, especially against the yuan, and securing a higher USD/INR rate as on financial year-end could possibly have been the twin motives of the central bank. The up-move further triggered the unwinding of short USD/INR carry positions.’ the report said.

RBI dollar-buying spree

The central bank continued to shore up its forex reserves till early 2021 following which India’s forex reserves touched a record high of $590.185 billion by the end of January, according to Bloomberg data. Later, however, the forex reserves figure stagnated close to the $580-billion levels.

Experts pointed out that the RBI is likely to have stopped buying dollars in the spot market over the last two months and this could have provided a boost to the currency, especially at a time when foreign investors were buying into equities.

Anindya Banerjee, Vice-President at Kotak Securities, confirms that the central bank may have intervened and purchased close to $160 billion between June 2020 and February 2021, via spot, futures, and forwards which he believes could be a record level of intervention. “As long as the intervention was via the spot market, it was effective. However, once the RBI switched to forwards, it caused the forward premium to rise, thereby incentivising carry trade in a huge way,” he added.

Strong inflows from FPIs have also contributed to the rise in rupee over the last few months. Since January, FPIs have infused over $7 billion on a net basis into Indian equity markets although they have been net sellers in the bond market to the tune of over $2 billion.

The way forward

The significant fund flows into Indian equities over the last two months may not continue for long and that could have an impact on the currency.

MS Gopikrishnan, independent market expert, said usually the last quarter of the fiscal year is the best one for rupee from a trade deficit point of view. “We are just crossing that period and also entering a period of uncertainties in FPI flows on the back of higher US rates; these factors can put pressure on the rupee against the dollar. I expect the pair to move towards 74 in the coming weeks,” Gopikrishnan said.

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Rupee rises 9 paise against US dollar in early trade

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The rupee appreciated by 9 paise to 72.46 against the US dollar in opening trade on Thursday, supported by positive domestic equity markets and easing crude prices.

However, a strong US dollar against major currencies overseas restricted the rupee’s rise, forex dealers said.

At the interbank forex market, the local unit opened at 72.48 against the US dollar, then inched higher to 72.46, registering a rise of 9 paise over its previous close.

On Wednesday, the rupee had settled at 72.55 against the American currency.

On the domestic equity market front, the 30-share BSE benchmark Sensex was trading 292.68 points higher at 50,094.30, and the broader NSE Nifty rose 90.50 points to 14,811.80.

After its two-day policy meeting, the US Fed reassured investors that it expects to keep its key interest rate near zero through 2023.

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, surged 0.10 per cent to 91.53.

Brent crude futures, the global oil benchmark, fell 0.69 per cent to $67.53 per barrel.

Foreign institutional investors remained net buyers in the capital market as they bought shares worth ₹2,625.82 crore on Wednesday, according to exchange data.

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India looks set to weather global bond rout with record reserves

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India’s record foreign-exchange reserves and a rare current-account surplus look set to cushion the nation’s currency and bonds from a global surge in interest rates.

While the Reserve Bank of India does have its hands full managing the government’s large debt issuance, strategists see the country in a much stronger financial position now than it was during previous bouts of turmoil in world markets. They cite the rupee, which has eked out a gain this year, defying the slump seen in most emerging-market currencies, and relative stability of India’s bonds.

With reserves closing in on $600 billion and a current-account surplus forecast to exceed 1 per cent of gross domestic product, talk of India as one of five fragile emerging markets has mostly faded away. When the description was coined during the taper tantrum in 2013, inflation in India was running at around 10 per cent.

Data due March 12 is projected to show consumer prices rising at less than half that level, and well below the 6.6 per cent average of last year. Meanwhile, benchmark 10-year bond yields have largely been capped since last year by the central bank and the nation’s stocks continue to see foreign inflows.

“India’s markets are likely to be relatively immune to higher U.S. yields in the weeks ahead,” said Mitul Kotecha, chief EM Asia and Europe strategist at TD Securities in Singapore. “India has been a key beneficiary of equity inflows into Asia and we do not see outflows persisting.”

Ahead of the CPI figures, here is a series of charts highlighting points of strength in India that have been cited by analysts.

Stock inflows

Indian stocks have attracted about $6 billion of foreign inflows this year, the highest in emerging Asia after China, and well above those of the country’s erstwhile ‘Fragile Five’ peers. The prospect of strong economic growth has been underpinned by an early start to India’s coronavirus inoculation campaign, aided by domestically produced vaccines.

FX reserves

The RBI has added $127 billion to its foreign-exchange kitty since the beginning of January last year, the biggest increase among major Asian economies. At the current rate of accumulation, India is on course to pass Russia and take fourth place in global rankings for reserves, behind China, Japan and Switzerland.

This large well of reserves should give authorities fire power to deal with any potential capital outflows driven by external shocks, according to Kaushik Das, Chief India Economist at Deutsche Bank in Mumbai.

Current account

India is expected to post a current-account surplus of 1.1 per cent of GDP in the current fiscal year, along with a balance-of-payments surplus of $96 billion, according to Emkay Global Financial Serviced.

While the current account may swing back to a small deficit next fiscal year, healthy capital flows may keep the balance of payments positive to the tune of $45-50 billion, helping to support the rupee, according to Madhavi Arora, lead economist at Emkay.

Bond returns

India’s sovereign bonds offer more stable returns than many others in emerging markets, as measured against annualised 60-day volatility in benchmark 10-year securities. The RBI has made over ₹3-lakh crore ($41 billion) of bond purchases this fiscal year and plans to buy at least that amount next year, according to RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, which should help to curb gains in yields.

Economic growth

India’s economy is projected by the International Monetary Fund to grow 11.5 per cent in 2021, a pace that is likely to be the fastest of any major economy, which also augurs well for inflows and the rupee.

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RBI helps India’s financial condition rebound to better than pre-pandemic level at full speed

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Buying term insurance plan and multi-cap mutual fund schemes will become much simpler than before.

India’s financial condition has staged a full-throttle recovery after the coronavirus disruptions and has rebounded to better than the pre-pandemic level. The Financial Condition Index by Crisil Research showed that India’s financial condition has improved significantly and is at a better position than the pre-pandemic level. The Reserve Bank of India is believed to be the major driver of financial condition;s improvement. In lockstep with central banks elsewhere, measures by the RBI have helped mitigate the large and broad-based economic damage caused by the pandemic, said a report by Crisil. While easy global monetary policies have helped, the RBI’s accommodative stance has helped contain short-run pressures no less, the report added. 

Policy rate, liquidity conditions, markets, foreign exchange, and global conditions were the major drivers of the financial conditions this year. Earlier in October 2020, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das had said that the RBI stands ready to undertake further measures as necessary to assure market participants of access to liquidity and easy financing conditions. 

Since March, the RBI has cut the repo rate by 115 basis points and the reverse repo rate by 155 basis points. It has also purchased ₨ 1.9 lakh crore of G-secs (on a net basis) until September, compared with Rs 0.9 lakh crore in the corresponding period last year. These measures have helped in slashing the interest rates in money and debt markets, and has even got transmitted to bank lending rates to some extent, Crisil added. 

Stress on financial sector 

However, the country’s financial sector still has some major roadblocks. Bank credit growth, which was already weakening before Covid-19, has fallen even further in recent months. Crisil estimated bank credit growth to slow down to a multi-decadal low of 0-1 per cent this fiscal year. Further, high government borrowing and the stress in the corporate bond market are other majors casting shadows of stress on the financial sectors.

Meanwhile, the financial condition in India had been tightening since the IL&FS default in 2018, which triggered a liquidity crisis for non-banking financial companies (NBFCs). The Covid-19 pandemic only magnified this. Consequently, India’s financial condition was the tightest in a decade in April this year, once the lockdown began. 

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