Skip to main content

Rupee may fall against euro, yen

Rupee may fall against euro, yen
But it will continue to rise against the dollar, providing opportunities for trades
The global currency market has been braced for volatility, as the Brexit negotiations drag on. December saw a string of central bank policy reviews but none of the big decisions surprised. However, the new year has brought surprises, in terms of unexpected trends.
The consensus opinion was that the pound would be under pressure. The Bank of England held its policy rates but the UK is suffering the twinned curse of higher inflation and recession. However, itā€™s the US dollar which has taken a hammering in the last 10 days, dropping to six-month lows versus most currencies. The Dollar Index, which measures the dollar versus a basket of six other currencies, is down below 92. The rupee is at a 30-month high versus the dollar, edging to the Rs 63.5-mark
On the face of it, this is odd. The Federal Reserve hiked the policy rate in December. Bond yields have risen. The Fed has also signalled that it might hike rates thrice in 2018. Meanwhile, US inflation remains low, which means the real return on US debt has risen.
Since the euro is running a negative policy rate and so is the yen, the primary expectation would be that the dollar should harden. Instead, the whole of 2017 has seen the dollar sliding; now down 14 per cent against the euro in the past 12 months.
One possible reason is that the Euro zone has seen strong growth for the first time since the global financial crisis. There are expectations that the European Central Bank will cut its ongoing Quantitative Easing (QE) programme entirely after September. The QE has already been halved in terms of quantum. There are also expectations that the ECB will raise policy rate in 2018. Hence, forex traders are front running Mario Draghi taking positions that would gain if the consensus is right.
Traders are seeing a technical danger signal in the US yield curves. The curve compares yields for different tenures of government debt, is considered healthy, if longer tenures have higher yields. If the curve flattens with little yield differential, or if it inverts with short tenure yields higher than long-tenure yields, it implies investors are expecting recessive conditions.
The US yield curve is flattening. This seems odd; in that the US economy seems to be doing fine and the stock market is roaring to new highs. However, there is just a chance that the Fed will hike rates even more enthusiastically if it thinks the Trump tax cuts will lead to higher inflation.
There are several implications for India. One is that this could spark off a rally in gold. Dollar weakness often leads to a rally in gold prices ā€” it is started artificially since world gold prices are dollar-denominated. But, if the dollar-gold ratio is down, there tend to be speculators getting into the metal, which creates some momentum. Given the desi love affair with gold, this will be greeted joyously. Other commodities can also be pushed into rallies for similar reasons.Itā€™s important to note that the rupee retains stable exchange rates with the euro and yen but much of Indiaā€™s foreign trade is dollar-denominated. Apart from North America, trade with Latin America, East Europe, and Africa is dollar-denominated.
A stronger rupee will, therefore, lead to somewhat slower exports. But, it still might help with the trade balance, since imports will get cheaper. A stronger rupee should also help curtail domestic inflation, since crude oil import prices have a serious impact and crude oil is dollar-denominated.
As far as the forex trader is concerned, the dollar rupee equation has moved in the ā€˜wrongā€™ direction. Now, itā€™s a question of riding this trend and waiting for the dollar to bottom out. The euro-rupee trend remains somewhat in favour of the euro and traders are betting that the euro will strengthen even more.
What holds for the euro holds for the yen as well. Japan has seen its best year in terms of growth in two decades. The Bank of Japan also has a negative interest rate and a massive QE running. There have been hints of tightening. That could drive the yen up. There may be a potential set of trades here with the rupee dropping versus the euro and yen, even as it rises versus the dollar.

The BUsiness Standard, New Delhi, 8th January 2018

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

GST collection for November rises by 8.5% to Rs.1.82 trillion

  New Delhi: Driven by festive demand, the Goods and Services Tax (GST) collections for the Union and state governments climbed to Rs.1.82 trillion in November, marking an 8.5% year-on-year growth, according to official data released on Sunday. Sequentially, however, the latest collection figures are lower than the Rs.1.87 trillion reported in October, which was the second highest reported so far since the new indirect tax regime was introduced in 2017. The highest-ever GST collection of Rs.2.1 trillion was reported in April. The consumption tax figures highlight the positive impact of the recent festive season on goods purchases, providing a much-needed boost the industry had been anticipating. The uptick in GST collections driven by festive demand had been anticipated by policymakers, who remain optimistic about sustained growth in rural consumption and an improvement in urban demand. The Ministry of Finance, in its latest monthly economic review released last week, stated that I...

Budget: Startup sector gets new Fund of Funds, FM to allocate Rs 10K cr

  The Indian startup sector received a boost with Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announcing the establishment of a new fund of funds (FoF) in the Budget 2025. The minister unveiled a fresh FoF with an expanded scope, allocating Rs 10,000 crore. The initial fund of funds announced by the government with an investment of Rs 10,000 crore successfully catalysed commitments worth Rs 91,000 crore, the minister said.   ā€œThe renewal of the Rs 10,000 crore commitment to the Fund of Funds for alternative investment funds (AIFs) is a significant step forward for the Indian startup and investment ecosystem. The initial Rs 10,000 crore commitment catalysed Rs 91,000 crore in investments, and I fully expect this fresh infusion to attract an additional Rs 1 lakh to Rs 1.5 lakh crore in capital,ā€ said Anirudh Damani, managing partner, Artha Venture Funds.   Damani further added that this initiative will provide much-needed growth capital to early-stage startups, further strengthenin...