HomeNewsOpinionOpinion | Rupee fall makes case for rate hike in August

Opinion | Rupee fall makes case for rate hike in August

A weaker rupee and rising crude prices could lead to imported inflation and make the case for the central bank to be more cautious.

July 25, 2018 / 16:49 IST
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Ravi Krishnan Moneycontrol News

The rupee's fall to a lifetime low of 69.09 to a dollar on Thursday was not unexpected, as argued in this column previously. What's worse, the fall has increased the chances of a rate hike by the Reserve Bank of India when its monetary policy panel meets in August.

A weaker rupee and rising crude prices could lead to imported inflation and make the case for the central bank to be more cautious.

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The local currency has fallen 8% versus the US dollar so far this year. Economists from DBS Bank and Barclays expect it to breach the 70 to a dollar mark. Sure, the rupee is the not the only currency that is falling. The depreciation is part of a wave of selling in emerging market currencies. China is letting the yuan fall against the US dollar as it seeks leverage in the trade war with US, putting further pressure on emerging market currencies.

India is more vulnerable than some others owing to its so-called twin deficits: a current account deficit and a fiscal deficit, both of which need financing. In the past few years, this has been easy with huge foreign portfolio investments in both equities and bonds. Now the situation has changed as global financial conditions tighten. Since the start of this financial year, foreign investors have pulled almost $9 billion from Indian markets.