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Hands-Off Approach By RBI Emboldens Rupee Traders

Traders see the central bank as being more comfortable with a stronger rupee.



Indian two thousand rupee banknotes are arranged for a photograph. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
Indian two thousand rupee banknotes are arranged for a photograph. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) hands-off approach towards the Indian rupee has prompted traders to increase bets on a further appreciation in the Indian currency.

The rupee, which has been strengthening on the back of strong inflows into the equity and debt markets, has now gained 6 percent since the start of the year. On Friday, the Indian currency closed at a 20-month high of 64.28 against the U.S. dollar, despite demand for safe haven assets in light of a U.S. strike against Syria.

Portfolio flows continue to be very strong, said Bhaskar Panda, senior vice president of treasury at HDFC Bank, adding that another Rs 16,000 crore has come in over the first week of April. So far in 2017, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have brought in a net of Rs 84,504 crore into the debt and equity markets, according to data available on the National Securities Depository Ltd. (NSDL).

The RBI, however, has stayed on the sidelines and not come in to protect key levels as it did in the past.

“The RBI did not come in to protect levels like 64.80/$ which were seen as key for the market. Once those levels were breached, the rupee appreciated further,” said Panda. The RBI has kept intervention to a minimum in both the spot and the forwards market, which Panda terms as “surprising.”

Hands-Off Approach By RBI Emboldens Rupee Traders

One perceived reason for the limited intervention is the surplus liquidity situation prevailing in the economy following the surge in banking sector deposits due to demonetisation.

In its monetary policy report released on April 6, the central bank said that it had absorbed a daily average surplus liquidity of Rs 5.9 lakh crore in the January-March quarter. This situation would have worsened if the RBI had heavily bought dollars from the market, releasing more rupee liquidity into the market.

However, in its conference call with analysts post the monetary policy review, central bank officials said that intervention in the forex market is independent of conditions in the domestic money markets, according to a April 6 report by HSBC.javascript:void(0)

This could further lead to speculation that the central bank is comfortable with a stronger currency.

Importantly, there was little discussion from the RBI on the Indian rupee despite its significant outperformance over the last month. This could to some extent fuel the recent discussion that forex policy is becoming more tolerant of rupee strength.
Pranjul Bhandari, Chief Economist, HSBC India

Technically, too, the Indian rupee seems set for strength, said Mathew Jones, head of technical research at Almus Risk Consulting.

“The technical breakdown of 66.10/$ supports which held for more than 2 years and the absence of the central bank to defend these levels prompted players to go short with financial year end flows,” Jones told BloombergQuint. He added that market participants think the RBI’s appetite to buy dollars is significantly lesser than a few months ago which is reflected in the number of lower closes for the dollar against the rupee since the Union Budget was announced on February 1.

Panda of HDFC Bank agrees that technicals may support further appreciation of the currency. 63.50/$ is the next technical level to watch, said Panda while adding that fundamentals will eventually catch up.

“Eventually if the rupee is overvalued it will correct. When and how, nobody can say,” said Panda.