Friday 24 January 2014

Where is the Indian Rupee going from here?


The GBPINR rate has been trending upwards, and ever since the Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke announced the central bank’s intentions to reduce monetary stimulus, the Indian rupee has depreciated significantly.

In general there has been a great concern that many emerging market economies such as India will suffer from capital flight once the Fed decide to gradually return to more normal monetary policy. The decision to reduce asset purchases was considered the first step, and currencies such as the Indian rupee tumbled once the intention was announced last summer. More importantly, the rupee’s depreciation intensified due to its current account deficits and growth fears of the emerging markets as a whole.

India also suffers from very high inflation and this has also undermined the currency. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is now considering introducing an inflation target and this will allow the markets to clearly asses RBI’s performance as well as understand what their goals are.

On the UK side of things, the economic recovery has strengthened and economic fundamentals continue to paint a brighter picture for the UK. Inflation has slowed to the central bank’s 2% y/y target and unemployment has also plummeted to 7.1%. The rapid improvement in the outlook for the UK has strengthened the pound, and has also increased market speculation about when the BoE will be ready to raise interest rates. BoE Governor Carney has claimed that the central bank has no plans of raising interest rates any time soon, but as long as economic indicators continue to display and improving economic environment, expectations of a rate increase will remain.

Based on these factors we see expect the upward trend in GBPINR to continue. The rupee is stabilizing, but as the Fed continues to wind down purchases, and the economic situation in the UK improves the only way is up for GBPINR.

Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst