Monday, June 25, 2012

Reuters: US Dollar Report: UPDATE 1-Hopes for India FX measures lift rupee from record low

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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UPDATE 1-Hopes for India FX measures lift rupee from record low
Jun 25th 2012, 07:55

Mon Jun 25, 2012 3:55am EDT

  * High current account deficit seen limiting impact of  measures      * Rupee hit record low of 57.32/dollar on Friday      * Moody's maintains stable outlook for India rating          By Swati Bhat and Shamik Paul      MUMBAI, June 25 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee rallied on  Monday on hopes for government measures to halt a slump in the  currency, which hit a record low on Friday, with traders saying  action to boost long-term foreign investment would be the most  effective step.      Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said at the weekend that  India would unveil measures on Monday but gave no details. The  fall in the rupee has mirrored a decline in economic growth to a  nine-year low of 5.3 percent in the March quarter.         India may introduce bonds for non-resident Indians with an  interest rate of 7-9 percent, a source with knowledge of the  matter said, as speculation over imminent measures was rife in  India's markets.       Traders and analysts said measures could include changes to  foreign bond investment limits to attract more inflows into  government and corporate securities. Another possibility would  allow oil importers to buy their dollars directly from the  central bank rather than via the foreign exchange market.      "The impact will be temporary unless long-term steps like  boosting FDI and curtailing current account deficits are taken,"  said Kumar Rachapudi, fixed income strategist in Singapore at  Barclays, which expects the rupee to strengthen to 52 to the  dollar by the end of 2012.      However, analysts said these sorts of measures would provide  only stop-gap relief and that India needed to improve its  economic fundamentals, including addressing its current account  deficit, to bolster the rupee.      "The problem with the rupee is fundamental, and technical  measures cannot be supportive over a longer period of time,"  said Sanjay Mathur, an economist with Royal Bank of Scotland in  Singapore.      "But it is also important to note that all the India-centric  factors for the fall in the rupee, like lack of reforms, has  been priced in. Further weakness will be because of the global  risk-averse sentiment," he said.      The rupee's decline comes when emerging market currencies  have weakened against the dollar as investors, worried about the  global economic slowdown and the euro zone crisis, flee to the  perceived safety of dollars.      At 12:43 p.m. (0713 GMT), the partially convertible rupee   was trading at 56.57/58 per dollar, up sharply from its  Friday close of 57.12/13 but off its intraday high of 56.37.      On Friday, the rupee fell to a record low of 57.32, down  about 7.4 percent since the start of the year, making it the  worst performing currency in Asia.      Traders said the central bank could target bringing in  short-term inflows to stabilise the rupee by tapping funds held  by non-resident Indians.      Morgan Stanley estimates India's current account deficit  will widen to $72 billion by the end of June, from $49 billion a  year earlier. That would put the current account deficit at  between 4 percent and 4.5 percent of India's GDP.      "A sustainable solution would need a reduction of the  current account deficit to around 2-2.25 percent of GDP with  tighter fiscal policy, acceptance of slower consumption growth,  and implementation of reforms that improve the business climate  to encourage FDI inflows," the bank said in a client note.            RANGE OF POSSIBILITIES      The Reserve Bank of India has discussed with state-run oil  firms steering 50 percent of their dollar purchases via a single  state-owned bank to smooth volatility in the rupee, though no  decision has been made, two oil executives said on Friday.      Dollar purchases from oil companies account for around  $10-$12 billion of dollar demand in domestic currency markets  each month, according to HSBC.      Another measure might be to provide a special central bank  window to sell dollars directly to oil companies, traders said.      India needs to shore up its credibility among investors,  both in sticking to its projected fiscal deficit of 5.1 percent  for the fiscal year ending March 2013 and to narrow its current  account deficit, analysts said.      "In the short term, apart from augmenting capital inflows  via a special dollar deposit scheme, we believe policy makers  have few options to manage exchange rate volatility if risk  aversion in global financial markets continues," Morgan Stanley  wrote.      Another option would enable the RBI to provide dollars to  oil companies against oil bonds, which would help in removing  dollar demand from the market and containing rupee volatility.      Standard & Poor's and Fitch Ratings have cut their outlook  on India's sovereign ratings to negative, threatening its  investment-grade status, citing slowing policy reforms.      Moody's Investors Service on Monday though said it was  maintaining a stable outlook for India's Baa3 rating. It said  slowing growth and higher levels of inflation were already  factored into the outlook.      In a shot in the arm for the economy, Sweden's IKEA  , the world's largest furniture retailer, said on  Friday it would invest 1.5 billion euros ($1.9 billion) to open  25 stores in India.  
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