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India: rupee down but watch out for a sudden reversal
Resilience comes to
an end
Contrary to
conventional wisdom, the INR demonstrated remarkable resilience for
much of the last year. To fully appreciate this, consider the
following: India imports more than 80 percent of its crude
requirements. The Indian crude basket jumped more than 50 percent
between July 2010 and July 2011. Despite this, however, the INR
actually appreciated almost 5 percent during that time, as India’s
exports surged and the trade deficit compressed
sharply.
However, that
resilience has come to an end over the last 6 weeks. Starting
August 8, the Monday after US Treasuries were downgraded, the INR
began to under-perform the region. As global risk aversion has
risen in recent weeks, pressures have built up and came to a head
over the last week. The USD/INR depreciated almost 5% over the last
week, one its worst performances in 18 years, and is now trading at
its lowest level since May 2009.
A half
truth
The INR’s sharp
depreciation and the fact that it began to depreciate sooner than
other Asian currencies may give the impression that it has
consistently underperformed the region over the last two months.
That is only half true.
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The INR significantly
underperformed the region (ex CNY and HKD) in August. The reasons
were manifold. Domestic trade fundamentals worsened in August (the
trade deficit rose to $14 billion from $11 billion the month
before) as India's sizzling export run finally began to moderate.
Meanwhile, import growth remained healthy as, contrary to
conventional wisdom, the economy only slowed gradually and domestic
firms continued to indulge in import substitution to take advantage
of the inflation differential between India and her trading
partners. This was exacerbated by a one-off $5 billion of oil
payments to Iran. As a result, the currency depreciated almost 5%
that month even as the downward move of other Asian currencies was
far more muted. All this was compounded by the fact that the INR is
a “high-beta” currency – historically underperforming the region in
times of global stress, as investors worry about the financing of
its current account deficit, in contrast to the current account
surpluses of its neighbors.
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That said, the INR’s
performance in September is a completely different story. The trade
fundamentals likely did not improve in September and global stress
has increased in recent weeks (implying that India’s high-beta
characteristic should suggest increasing underperformance). Despite
that, however, the currency has held its own over the last month,
moving broadly in tandem with other Asian currencies (ex HKD and
CNY), suggesting that global, not domestic, factors have been
responsible for the INR’s recent trajectory.
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Weakness could
persist in the near-term
The key question,
however, is whether the weakness will persist or whether the INR
will quickly mean-revert, as has been the case in the
past.
With India’s trade and
current account deficit unlikely to compress sharply anytime soon,
rupee weakness could persist if global risk aversion were to remain
elevated. With new export orders within the PMI trending down for a
while, export growth is likely to moderate further. Meanwhile,
while the domestic economy slows, it is doing so very gradually. As
such, it is unlikely that import growth is going to collapse, even
if the 10% depreciation of the rupee in recent weeks has negated
the inflation differential between India and her trading partners.
As such, until India’s economy slows further and imports moderate
further, the current account deficit is likely to get worse before
it gets better.
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The fact that the INR
has moved in tandem with the rest of Asia over the last few weeks
suggest that India is still able to attract the capital flows to
finance the current deficit, with external commercial borrowings
(ECBs) and trade credits constituting the bulk of capital flows
over the last few months. However, sustained global stress could
result in these flows becoming relatively scarce. Add to this, the
negative sentiment that accompanies the INR in times of global
stress and near-term INR weakness is likely to sustain – reflected
in the fact that the perceived likelihood of a further depreciation
on the part of investors has recently increased
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Where is the
RBI?
The sharp depreciation
of the INR in recent weeks has effectively loosened monetary
conditions (by increasing the domestic price of tradables) and
thereby undercutting the central bank’s monetary tightening
efforts, leading market participants to expect that the RBI would
step in to stem the depreciation.
Belying expectations,
however, the RBI has not intervened in any significant manner or
expressed an interest to target a certain level, in keeping with
its hands-off approach from the FX market and recognizing that this
is a region-wide sentiment and one that will be difficult or very
costly to counter.
Will the RBI draw a
line on the sand? Not based on their behavior over the past three
years. The RBI tends to intervene only when it believes the
intervention will be effective. Against the wave of global
pessimism the RBI is unlikely to do so.
But BoP fundamentals
remain supportive
Near term weakness,
notwithstanding, the underlying BoP fundamentals are still
supportive of an INR appreciation when global stress
abates.
As alluded to above,
with export growth likely to moderate, and import growth still
healthy, the trade and current account deficits are likely to widen
in FY12. That said, sustained and elevated global risk aversion is
likely to depress commodity prices limiting the extent to which the
CAD widens in such an environment.
Our BoP projections
below assume that export growth for the full year will only be 12
percent, significantly below the current run-rate. We, therefore,
have assumed that exports are likely to taper off significantly for
the rest of the fiscal. We are similarly conservative on the trade
deficit, assuming that the trade deficit widens further to the
$15-16 billion for the rest of this year – levels that were last
seen in the run-up to the Lehman crisis. If anything, the CAD is
therefore likely to surprise on the downside.
The key, however, will
be capital flows. Even if FDI flows are very anemic over the next
few quarters, the pick-up in FDI in the last quarter in conjunction
with the recent passage of the BP-RIL deal should ensure a pick-up
in FDI flows for the full-year compared to the last
fiscal.
With policy rates
continuing to be raised in India and tight banking system liquidity
keeping market rates high, the onshore-offshore interest
differential has continued to widen, inducing corporates to borrow
offshore. This run-rate has picked up significantly in recent
months, and is likely to sustain once global stress settles. With
trade flows expected to moderate but still remaining relatively
buoyant – trade credits are also expected to be a source of flows,
unless global conditions worsen further. While FII equity flows
remain the joker in the pack, debt flows have been relatively
steady this fiscal and are expected to get a boost with the recent
relaxation of norms for FIIs interested in infrastructure
bonds.
Thus far while FII
flows are under-performing our projections, this has been offset by
the fact that external commercial borrowings (ECBs) (currently
tracking $3 billion a month since the start of the fiscal year) are
significantly above our projections.
In sum, relatively
conservative assumptions on capital flows are required to finance
the projected CAD for FY12, unless global risk aversion remains at
a level that is not conducive for EM assets.
Rupee’s sudden
reversals and exporters
Since the Lehman
crisis, the INR has crashed twice and in both instances has
reversed in 2-3 months once global risk aversion has dissipated. In
each case, domestic exporters appear to have played a key role both
in the crash and in the reversal. Typically as the rupee starts
depreciating, given the widely held but empirically unsubstantiated
belief that a current account deficit currency must depreciate,
exporters delay converting their earnings to increase their rupee
returns. The lack of supply turns the market relatively illiquid
and one-sided pushing even modest depreciation into free falls.
Once exporters start believing the bottom has been reached either
because of a turnaround in global sentiment or (in the unlikely
event) of the RBI supporting a level, they return with vengeance to
avoid losing any of the windfall gain. The sudden surge of the FX
selling sends the rupee in a sudden appreciating
reversal.
As such, we expect that
with global pessimism assuaging in the coming months as Europe
works out a solution to its debt and bank recapitalization
problems, the rupee is likely to revert to around USD/INR 45-46 by
December 2011 and 44-45 by March 2012.
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