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Is India Next to Hike After Indonesia Moves to Curb Market Rout?

All eyes on RBI to see if it will follow Indonesia in raising rates to help calm markets amid emerging-market rout.

Is India Next to Hike After Indonesia Moves to Curb Market Rout?
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) logo is displayed at the entrance to the bank’s headquarters in Mumbai (Photographer: Kainaz Amaria/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- All eyes are on India’s central bank to see if it will follow Indonesia in raising interest rates to help calm financial markets amid an emerging-market rout.

Both countries are part of the so-called Fragile Five’ club -- economies that are heavily reliant on foreign inflows and vulnerable to rising U.S. interest rates -- and are coming under strain as investors dump bonds and stocks and currencies weaken.

With Bank Indonesia raising interest rates on Thursday and pledging to take strong action to restore confidence in financial markets, more economists are betting the Reserve Bank of India will do the same, possibly as early as its next policy decision on June 6.

“As our Asian neighbors have shown, signaling an end to the accommodative stance may be required to contain financial stability risks,” said Priyanka Kishore, head of India and South Easy Asia economics at Oxford Economics Ltd. in Singapore. “The implications of a prolonged pause in an environment of rising global rates cannot be completely ignored.”

Here are some strikingly similar developments between the two countries that suggest why India may follow suit:

Foreigners Exit

Bonds in both countries have faced a selloff, with investors pulling out $3.3 billion this year from India’s market. But unlike Indonesia, investors are actually net buyers of stocks this year.

Is India Next to Hike After Indonesia Moves to Curb Market Rout?

The outflows have contributed to declines in India’s rupee, Asia’s worst performer this year, and rendered ineffective a series of measures taken by authorities to revive bond demand.

While the Reserve Bank of India has intervened through bond purchases, sentiment is dour. Its intervention in the foreign exchange market is tightening liquidity in the banking system and driving up borrowing costs. That could throw a 5.5 trillion-rupee ($81 billion) government borrowing program into jeopardy as well as threaten a nascent economic recovery.

But it’s not all gloom-and-doom. The selloff in emerging markets will be temporary, as JPMorgan Asset Management sees a revival in demand for these nations’ bonds and currencies when the dollar’s strength begins to wane.

Trade Gap

Both countries run sizable trade deficits, which make them more reliant on foreign flows to help finance import needs. Indonesia posted its biggest trade gap in four years in April, while in India, which is the world’s third-largest oil consumer, rising crude prices will widen the shortfall.

Analysts at Rabobank International led by senior economist Hugo Erken have calculated that if India ceases to attract substantial investment in equities and securities, the country could be looking at a shortfall of $19 billion this year, with implications for its overall current-account.

Pranjul Bhandari, chief India economist at HSBC Holdings Plc, estimates the current-account deficit will widen to 2.3 percent of GDP in the 2019 fiscal year from 1.9 percent in the previous year.

Is India Next to Hike After Indonesia Moves to Curb Market Rout?

Forex Reserves

India’s foreign exchange reserves have fallen $8.4 billion to $417.7 billion in the four weeks to May 11, according to data from the central bank, as it likely stepped up intervention in the currency market. That mirrors Indonesia’s reserves dropping to a 10-month low as Bank Indonesia drained more than $7 billion of reserves in three months to arrest a slide in the rupiah.

Is India Next to Hike After Indonesia Moves to Curb Market Rout?

Inflation Pressure

The central banks in the two countries are inflation targeters, and both have been cutting interest rates in recent years to bolster their economies. Inflation may come under pressure this year as rising oil prices and weaker currencies boost import costs. Bank Indonesia hiked rates even though it forecast inflation will remain within its 2.5 percent to 4.5 percent target band. RBI policy makers have been sounding more hawkish recently, and a pick-up in inflation to 4.6 percent in April gives them more reason to feel that way.

--With assistance from Subhadip Sircar.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anirban Nag in Mumbai at anag8@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nasreen Seria at nseria@bloomberg.net, Karthikeyan Sundaram

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.