HomeNewsBusinessAmid sinking rupee, Indian mutual funds keep FIIs from making heavy losses

Amid sinking rupee, Indian mutual funds keep FIIs from making heavy losses

The benchmark 50-stock Nifty index is up 8.5 percent for the calendar, despite the rupee depreciating 9.23 percent against the US dollar.

August 14, 2018 / 18:11 IST
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It has been close to four years since the rupee last fell to record lows, and while the Finance Minister said that India has enough foreign reserves to stem the tide, many stakeholders find it hard to not twiddle their thumbs in anxiety. How often does the worst happen, when the people of the nation have lost faith in the value of their currency? More often than one can imagine. Below are a list of currencies whose value depreciated to such an extent that in some cases, citizens were forced to face the absurdity of paying a wheelbarrow full of notes for a loaf of bread. (Image: Reuters)
It has been close to four years since the rupee last fell to record lows, and while the Finance Minister said that India has enough foreign reserves to stem the tide, many stakeholders find it hard to not twiddle their thumbs in anxiety. How often does the worst happen, when the people of the nation have lost faith in the value of their currency? More often than one can imagine. Below are a list of currencies whose value depreciated to such an extent that in some cases, citizens were forced to face the absurdity of paying a wheelbarrow full of notes for a loaf of bread. (Image: Reuters)

Pranay Lakshminarasimhan | Ritesh Presswala Moneycontrol News

India has been among the emerging markets where foreign institutional investors lost the least in dollar terms so far in 2018. The benchmark 50-stock Nifty index is up 8.5 percent for the calendar, despite the rupee depreciating 9.23 percent against the US dollar. Strong inflows into domestic mutual funds has been the main reason for this trend.

So while the Nifty rose in absolute terms, a foreign investor would still have seen his portfolio value shrink slightly because of the depreciation in the rupee.

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Although this by itself may not convey why the Indian market is better placed than its emerging market peers, a look at the performance of nine other emerging markets indices and the movement in their respective currencies paints a clearer picture.

Calendar 2018 has been bad for emerging markets currencies in general, and more so for some than the others. The Turkish lira has been the worst-affected of the lot, crashing around 80 percent against the dollar.