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Oversold Rupee to Rise as Oil Peaks, Says SBI Executive

India’s rupee may be set to recover as oil peaks out and investors realize the currency has been sold off too heavily.

Oversold Rupee to Rise as Oil Peaks, Says SBI Executive
The portrait of Mahatma Gandhi is displayed on an Indian 2,000 rupee banknote in an arranged photograph in Bangkok. (Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- India’s rupee may be set to recover as oil peaks out and investors realize the currency has been sold off too heavily amid the emerging-market rout, according to Shantanu Shukla, a vice president for global markets at India’s biggest bank.

The currency’s slide this year is also likely to be self-correcting to some extent as its weakness will help boost exports, said Shukla, who works for SBI in Singapore. While part of the rupee’s weakness has stemmed from the U.S.-China trade war, he said this may actually benefit India’s economy as businesses look to source products from alternative markets.

“In the short term, the rupee is suffering from the market sentiment,” Shukla said in an interview this week. “Right now it’s contagion. Everything is being painted with the same brush. I don’t think beyond 70 is a number that the Indian rupee should trade at.”

Oversold Rupee to Rise as Oil Peaks, Says SBI Executive

The rupee is this year’s worst-performing Asian currency, dropping 11 percent to set a succession of record lows. It reached an all-time low of 72.9750 per dollar this week before jumping 0.2 percent on Friday to 72.2288. The currency may eventually strengthen back to 68, Shukla said, without giving a time frame.

India’s government has been seeking to stem the selloff, last week announcing a number of measures to stem the rupee’s slide. These included relaxing overseas borrowing restrictions on local manufacturers, reviewing whether to ease a cap of foreign ownership of corporate bonds, and considering limiting “non-essential imports.”

Worsening Deficit

These efforts have so far failed to halt the currency’s decline as buoyant fuel costs have pushed up India’s import bill and worsened its current-account deficit.

Relief may be in sight on the oil front, Shukla said. The surge in crude will encourage shale producers to re-enter the market, helping to cap the oil price at $80 to $85 per barrel, he said.

The Reserve Bank of India may also tighten policy again to bolster the rupee when it meets next month, he said. The central bank raised interest rates to the highest in two years in August.

The rupee’s recent plunge is evoking memories of slide of around 20 percent from February to August 2013 during the so-called taper tantrum. India’s fundamentals have improved since then and it has a bigger war chest of foreign-exchange reserves, Shukla said.

“Smart institutional money will come back,” he said. “At some point, this whole fall will be stemmed and we will see money coming back.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Liau Y-Sing in Kuala Lumpur at yliau@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tan Hwee Ann at hatan@bloomberg.net, Nicholas Reynolds, Patricia Lui

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