Central bank hand contains rupee's fall, shrinks dollar-rupee forward premiums

Kitco Media
By Reuters
Published:
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Reuters
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MUMBAI, June 2 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee and dollar-rupee forward premiums fell on Tuesday, driven by opposing forces of importer hedging, foreign ​portfolio outflows and likely central bank intervention across FX market segments.

The ‌rupee ended at 95.2650 per dollar, down 0.3% from its close in the previous session.

Traders said that the losses would have been steeper had it not been for the Reserve Bank of India's ​dollar-selling interventions, which have continued in almost every session since the rupee hit a record ​low of 96.96 per dollar in mid-May.

The central bank has conducted ⁠these interventions alongside dollar-rupee buy/sell swaps to manage rupee liquidity and the impact on ​its foreign exchange reserves.

Dollar-rupee forward premiums fell on Tuesday as a result of such ​swaps, with the 1-year implied yield down 12 basis points at 3.03%. Forward premiums reflect the cost of hedging against rupee weakness.

Despite the interventions, traders reckon the pressure on the rupee ​will persist in the near term as capital flows remain weak and ​uncertainty over the Middle East conflict keeps oil prices volatile.

Oil prices fell more than 1% on Tuesday, ‌paring the ⁠previous session's sharp gains, after U.S. President Donald Trump said talks with Iran were ongoing, running counter to a report that Tehran had suspended indirect negotiations with Washington to end hostilities.

The war-sparked disruption of global energy supplies has clouded India's macroeconomic ​outlook, leaving the RBI in a policy ​bind over potentially ⁠higher inflation and slower growth as it tries to contain the rupee's persistent decline.

Economists at J.P. Morgan, like a majority of those ​polled by Reuters, expect the RBI to keep the key ​policy rate ⁠unchanged at 5.25% at its meeting on Friday.

"Given the recent weakness in the currency, the RBI is likely to reiterate the “separability” principle under the inflation-targeting regime: Policy rates are ⁠used ​to manage growth-inflation dynamics, while FX volatility is ​addressed through FX reserves and other regulatory measures," J.P. Morgan said.

Reporting by Jaspreet Kalra; Editing by Ronojoy Mazumdar and Sonia Cheema

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