HomeNewsOpinionIndia: Will a weak rupee constrain the easing cycle?

India: Will a weak rupee constrain the easing cycle?

While currency volatility is a concern for central banks, including the RBI MPC, these are overrun by domestic priorities. The fiscal policy assumed a contractionary impulse on the back of a narrower deficit target for FY26, passing the baton to the central bank. If inflation is aligned with the targets, monetary policy is likely to assume a growth supportive stance in the quarters ahead.

February 13, 2025 / 08:26 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
indian-rupee
While a shift in the RBI’s tolerance is palpable, the pace of rupee decline can’t be solely attributed to the change in guard at the central bank.

The Reserve Bank of India’s monetary policy committee delivered a unanimous rate cut this month. This contrasted with the 4-2 vote in favour of keeping rates on hold in December’s rate review. A change in the composition of the MPC – new external members joined in October 2024, a new Governor in December 2024, and a new Deputy Governor to be named soon (represented by Deputy Governor Rajeshwar Rao until then) – led to a softening of the previously held hawkish bias. This was likely driven by concerns over being behind the curve as inflation has been on a downtrend towards the 4 percent target, and high-frequency growth indicators exhibit weak momentum.

Recent depreciation pressure on the currency is a thorn in the side of the policymakers. The rupee depreciated 2.1 percent vs USD in fourth quarter of 2024, compared to nearly flat 1Q-3Q. The weakening bias continued into the New Year, demonstrated by a further 2 percent fall this quarter-to-date, amongst the worst performers in the Asia-10 space. Overvaluation of the broad real effective exchange rate (REER) has also weighed on the exchange rate, with December REER off high but still holding up well above 100 and one standard deviation above the moving 10-year average.

Story continues below Advertisement

Indian authorities have engaged in an asynchronous strategy with regards to currency management in the past eight years, divided into two phases. In the first, during occasions of a broader dollar weakness, dollar inflows were absorbed by active intervention, limiting the rupee’s appreciation. On the other hand, a strong USD-led up-move in the USD/INR was largely tolerated, which saw the rupee weaken steadily, while intervention capped volatility. In the second phase, since 2023, intervention has been directed at both ends of trade, minimising volatility.

Dynamics appear to have shifted since late-2024 as the rupee depreciated in sync with a stronger US dollar, pushing up implied volatility and forward premiums. While a shift in the RBI’s tolerance is palpable, the pace of rupee decline can’t be solely attributed to the change in guard at the central bank. Strong-handed intervention had become unsustainable as a rapid appreciation in the dollar magnified the liquidity misalignment, increasing the need to ease grip on the rupee. The balance of payments also swung into negative from 4Q24 with FPI outflows and a sharp reduction in net FDI adding to the liquidity squeeze.