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India’s Rupee Drops Most in a Month on U.S. Stimulus Taper Bets - Bloomberg
rupee fell the most in a month on speculation the U.S. will pare stimulus that has boosted inflows to emerging markets.
More economists predict the Federal Reserve will taper its $85 billion of monthly bond purchases next week, and a report due today is forecast to show retail sales in the world’s biggest economy rose in November by the most since June. India’s trade deficit narrowed to $9.22 billion last month from $10.6 billion in October as exports rose 5.9 percent and imports fell 16.4 percent, official data showed yesterday.
“Expectations of sustained comfort on trade deficit figures going ahead bode well for the rupee and should likely provide downside support,” analysts at Religare Capital Markets Ltd., including Tirthankar Patnaik in Mumbai, wrote in a research report today. This comes “even as a potential U.S. taper remains a key overhang,” they wrote.
The rupee fell 0.7 percent to 61.67 per dollar as of 9:40 a.m. in Mumbai, the biggest drop since Nov. 12, according to prices from local banks compiled by Bloomberg. Religare predicts the currency will trade between 58 and 62 in the “medium-term.” One-month implied volatility, a gauge of expected moves in the exchange rate used to price options, rose 35 basis points, or 0.35 percentage point, to 11.74 percent.
The Federal Open Market Committee may begin reducing bond purchases at its Dec. 17-18 meeting, according to 34 percent of economists surveyed Dec. 6 by Bloomberg, up from 17 percent in a Nov. 8 survey. U.S. retail sales rose 0.6 percent in November, after climbing 0.4 percent in October, according to a separate Bloomberg survey.
RBI Review
The Reserve Bank of India is also scheduled to review policy on Dec. 18. The authority is aiming for firm control over inflation, Governor Raghuram Rajan said in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata yesterday.
Rajan has raised the benchmark repurchase rate to 7.75 percent from 7.25 percent in two moves since assuming office on Sept. 4 even as the RBI predicts the economy will grow at 5 percent in the 12 months through March 2014, matching last year’s pace which was the slowest since 2003.
Consumer prices rose 10 percent in November from a year earlier, according to the median of 33 estimates in a Bloomberg survey before data due after market hours today. That compares with 10.09 percent the previous month, which was the fastest pace since March. Industrial production probably shrank 1.2 percent in October, according separate Bloomberg survey, after a 2 percent expansion in September.
Three-month offshore non-deliverable rupee forwards fell 0.7 percent to 63.02 per dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Forwards are agreements to buy or sell assets at a set price and date. Non-deliverable contracts are settled in dollars.
It look like any US action would easily affect the value of rupee.
rupee fell the most in a month on speculation the U.S. will pare stimulus that has boosted inflows to emerging markets.
More economists predict the Federal Reserve will taper its $85 billion of monthly bond purchases next week, and a report due today is forecast to show retail sales in the world’s biggest economy rose in November by the most since June. India’s trade deficit narrowed to $9.22 billion last month from $10.6 billion in October as exports rose 5.9 percent and imports fell 16.4 percent, official data showed yesterday.
“Expectations of sustained comfort on trade deficit figures going ahead bode well for the rupee and should likely provide downside support,” analysts at Religare Capital Markets Ltd., including Tirthankar Patnaik in Mumbai, wrote in a research report today. This comes “even as a potential U.S. taper remains a key overhang,” they wrote.
The rupee fell 0.7 percent to 61.67 per dollar as of 9:40 a.m. in Mumbai, the biggest drop since Nov. 12, according to prices from local banks compiled by Bloomberg. Religare predicts the currency will trade between 58 and 62 in the “medium-term.” One-month implied volatility, a gauge of expected moves in the exchange rate used to price options, rose 35 basis points, or 0.35 percentage point, to 11.74 percent.
The Federal Open Market Committee may begin reducing bond purchases at its Dec. 17-18 meeting, according to 34 percent of economists surveyed Dec. 6 by Bloomberg, up from 17 percent in a Nov. 8 survey. U.S. retail sales rose 0.6 percent in November, after climbing 0.4 percent in October, according to a separate Bloomberg survey.
RBI Review
The Reserve Bank of India is also scheduled to review policy on Dec. 18. The authority is aiming for firm control over inflation, Governor Raghuram Rajan said in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata yesterday.
Rajan has raised the benchmark repurchase rate to 7.75 percent from 7.25 percent in two moves since assuming office on Sept. 4 even as the RBI predicts the economy will grow at 5 percent in the 12 months through March 2014, matching last year’s pace which was the slowest since 2003.
Consumer prices rose 10 percent in November from a year earlier, according to the median of 33 estimates in a Bloomberg survey before data due after market hours today. That compares with 10.09 percent the previous month, which was the fastest pace since March. Industrial production probably shrank 1.2 percent in October, according separate Bloomberg survey, after a 2 percent expansion in September.
Three-month offshore non-deliverable rupee forwards fell 0.7 percent to 63.02 per dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Forwards are agreements to buy or sell assets at a set price and date. Non-deliverable contracts are settled in dollars.
It look like any US action would easily affect the value of rupee.