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The Indian Rupee fell past the 70 per dollar mark for the first time, weighed down by an emerging market currency rout.
The rupee fell 0.2 percent to 70.08 against the dollar at 10:35 am, following a 1.6 percent drop in previous session, its worst performance since September 2013. The currency is down almost 9 percent this year, making it Asia’s worst performer.
The local currency has hit hard from a recently Turkey-led sell off in emerging assets and the trade spat between US-China. A weaker rupee could complicate the Reserve Bank of India’s task of keeping inflation in check.
The monetary policy committee led by Governor Urjit Patel increased interest rates twice since June to curb rising price pressures, while the RBI depleted $23 billion in foreign reserves to check currency volatility.
Government data on Monday showed retail inflation quickened 4.17 percent in July from a year earlier, slower than the 4.5 percent median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists.
Bhaskar Panda, senior regional treasury advisory group at HDFC Bank doesn’t expect further rupee depreciation from current levels.
However, Sajjid Chinoy, chief India economist, JPMorgan believes it may not be meaningful to have dollar-rupee target right now.
While he agrees that the rupee may depreciate further if dollar strengthens or if things get worse in Turkey, he said it may not matter too much as it would be in line with all its trading partners.
Meanwhile, Abhishek Goenka, founder and CEO, India Forex Advisors expects more dollar-buying from foreign portfolio investors to hedge their rupee asset exposures. “The central bank may intervene less aggressively if the yuan continues to depreciate.”
(This story was first published on BloombergQuint)
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