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India’s Big Plan to Bring Rupee Trading Home Is an Uphill Task

As London does more rupee trading than Mumbai, can authorities in India get foreigners to transact onshore?

India’s Big Plan to Bring Rupee Trading Home Is an Uphill Task
Indian two thousand rupee banknotes (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- As London does more rupee trading than Mumbai, authorities in India are taking steps to get foreigners to transact onshore. Analysts say that will be no easy task.

There’s no good reason for market participants to switch from excellent global trading hubs such as Singapore and London, said Jeffrey Halley, a senior market analyst at Oanda Asia Pacific Pte., who’s extensively traded currencies in offshore markets over a three-decade career. For Schroder Investment Management Ltd., the need to add more counterparties would just increase investors’ trading costs.

India’s authorities are concerned a surge in rupee trading overseas threatens the stability of the currency, especially in times of stress. That worry has intensified after London overtook Mumbai as the top trading center. In response, India has been moving to make its onshore market more attractive and preparing to replicate offshore centers in specially designated financial zones within the country.

For Halley, that’s like fighting the waves.

“Institutions have access to a Michelin 3-star menu” of currencies from “all over the world, all in one center,” in hubs like Singapore and London, he said. “Banks would have no incentive, from a purely cost basis alone, to set up a separate operation onshore.”

At issue is the rise of derivatives known as non-deliverable forwards -- bets on the direction of a currency made in offshore centers, beyond the rules of domestic authorities and without the need to deliver the currency itself. The contracts, which allow investors to hedge, arbitrage and speculate in non-convertible currencies such as the rupee, can be traced back to the 1990s but have surged in popularity in recent years.

London has become the biggest center for trading the Indian currency, according to the latest survey by the Bank for International Settlements in September. Average daily volumes for the rupee in the U.K. soared to $46.8 billion in April, exceeding the $34.5 billion recorded in India. Volumes have also substantially jumped in other centers like Singapore, New York and Dubai.

NDF Market

“It will be a better world for us if there is no NDF market, but we cannot wish it away,” former Reserve Bank of India chief Duvvuri Subbarao famously said during the U.S. taper tantrum of 2013 when the Indian currency was plummeting to record lows on an almost daily basis, with NDFs blamed for a surge in speculative trading.

India’s Big Plan to Bring Rupee Trading Home Is an Uphill Task

In a report in July, an RBI task force on offshore rupee markets recommended getting trading back to the onshore market by extending trading hours and allowing local banks to offer price quotes to foreigners round the clock. It also said non-deliverable forwards trading should be permitted in special centers within India that would replicate the attractiveness of offshore locations.

In October, the RBI said it would allow rupee trading by customers outside the jurisdiction of the domestic economy in low-tax venues. The International Financial Services Centre in the Gujarat International Finance Tec-City, or GIFT City, an effort by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to replicate the market in Singapore, is awaiting regulatory approvals before becoming the country’s first venue to offer NDF rupee contracts.

In the existing onshore over-the-counter market, foreigners are allowed to hedge only on the basis of their underlying exposure. They can only enter into plain vanilla forwards and option contracts and are generally not allowed to rebook a contract once canceled.

BSE Ltd.’s subsidiary India International Exchange (IFSC) Ltd., which will probably spearhead the launch of the rupee derivatives, says the new venue will be cost-competitive. But that alone won’t be enough to attract trading, according to investors.

India’s Big Plan to Bring Rupee Trading Home Is an Uphill Task

Manu George, senior investment director at Schroder Investment Management in Singapore, said it’s difficult to see a situation where offshore trading migrates to within India’s borders.

“India is not a major FX trading hub and so it’s inefficient from a firm’s point of view as there are more counterparties to generally trade FX than onshore in India,” he said. “Adding further counterparties adds to the cost and expense of setup and trading.”

India’s notorious flip-flops on rules remain a concern, according to Renuka Ramnath, founder and chief executive officer of Multiples Alternate Asset Management Pvt., a private equity company with close to $1 billion under management.

India’s Big Plan to Bring Rupee Trading Home Is an Uphill Task

Investors have been “a bit disappointed with frequently changing regulations, which keep them perpetually nervous about whether the assumptions they made before coming to India are indeed going to hold,” she said at an event at the GIFT City in August discussing ways to bring rupee trading onshore.

CountryNDF experience
ChinaDeliverable offshore market has shown exponential growth with the liberalization of the currency, making NDFs almost non-existent
KoreaMost-liquid NDF market among emerging market currencies. Local banks allowed to trade offshore, ensuring close integration
MalaysiaCracked down on NDF trading in 2016. Has helped increase depth and liquidity of onshore market
IndonesiaSet up domestic non-deliverable market, or DNDF, in late 2018, which is settled in rupiah. Though it’s still early days, there hasn’t been significant migration of trading from the offshore market
Source: RBI report

To be sure, India has made some progress in addressing those concerns. The government is establishing a unified regulator for the IFSCs, which will eliminate the need for dealing with each regulator separately. And to boost existing onshore trading, the Securities & Exchange Board of India has tried to ease some know-your-customer requirements.

Still, much more must be done, according to Sanjay Guglani, chief executive officer at Silverdale Capital Pte Ltd., a Singapore-based fund manager who manages about $1 billion of assets.

Authorities can offer round-the-clock trading and a clearing-house facility to avoid counterparty risk, he said. They should also provide connectivity with other exchanges such as Singapore, London and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange to attract volume and ensure better price discovery, he said.

While time will tell how successful India’s efforts will be, investors are broadly skeptical. And for Oanda’s Halley, even the basic premise of trying to turn back the clock on offshore rupee trading is misguided in today’s interconnected markets.

The rupee rose 0.2% to 71.6150 per dollar as of 10:05 a.m. in Mumbai.

“NDFs are merely part of an overall financial ecosystem of products, and the RBI’s white paper completely misses the point from the start by not recognizing this,” he said.

--With assistance from Nupur Acharya.

To contact the reporter on this story: Subhadip Sircar in Mumbai at ssircar3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tan Hwee Ann at hatan@bloomberg.net, Tom Redmond, Ravil Shirodkar

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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