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Battered Rupee On Track For Worst Annual Show In 5 Years: Survey

INR Vs USD: Rupee is likely to find it difficult to regain lost ground without RBI's support.
INR Vs USD: Rupee is likely to find it difficult to regain lost ground without RBI's support.

BENGALURU: The rupee will weaken over the next six months as uncertainty builds heading into national elections due in May, a Reuters poll showed. While a sharp drop in oil prices should help the slowing economy and the rupee, concerns will also persist over sluggish domestic demand which weighed more heavily on July-September growth than expected. Most major Asian currencies have had a bruising year amid a strong US dollar, though many have made some gains this week after the United States and China agreed at the weekend to a 90-day truce in their trade war.

But the rupee - which is the worst performing major Asian currency this year with a fall of more than 10 per cent - was an exception, weakening more than 1 per cent on Monday.

This week's surge in oil prices, alongside official figures on Friday showing weaker domestic economic growth during the July-September quarter, is offsetting hopes for an easing in the trade war.

Despite a few recent advances, the rupee is on track for its worst yearly performance in five years in 2018 and is forecast to weaken further.

"Politics is likely to decide the course for the Indian rupee in 2019. The political heat is already rising as the elections being held in five states currently will set the tone for the national elections in May 2019," noted Prakash Sakpal, Asia economist at ING.

Sakpal said it will be tough for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government to retain power for another term, noting the lingering public anger followed a chaotic demonetisation in late 2016 and the implementation of a Goods and Services Tax in mid-2017.

"We expect it to be a too-close-to-call poll."

The November 28-December 4 survey of around 40 strategists forecast the rupee would weaken over 2 per cent by the end of May 2019, just after the general election, to 72.00 against the dollar. It was trading around 70.49 on Tuesday.

But the currency is expected to have regained some of that lost ground a year from now, when it is seen at 71.62.

Those results are in line with a separate poll of equity strategists who for the first time this year downgraded their outlook for domestic equities in 2019. Any gains were predicted to come only after next year's elections.

However, the outlook for the rupee was slightly better in the latest poll from previously.

Nearly half of 51 analysts predicted in the last poll the rupee would breach its all-time low of 74.48 at some point in the coming 12 months, compared with only 13 of 49 respondents in this survey.

The currency touched a record low on October 11, hurt by the Reserve Bank of India's surprise decision to keep rates on hold.

But a recent cooling of tensions between the government and the central bank, accompanied by a sharp drop in oil prices since early October, gave a modest boost to the rupee in recent weeks.

The central bank and the government have been at loggerheads over the latter's demands, which included easing of lending and capital rules for some banks.

"The thawing of tensions between the RBI and the government is another positive for now, though recent tensions will continue to lurk in the background and are not positive for the currency," added Sakpal.

Improved sentiment over the rupee was also reflected in a separate Reuters poll which showed bets against the currency declined in the past two weeks to their lowest since April.

With October inflation below the central bank's medium-term target of 4 per cent for a third month, the RBI is expected to keep the repo rate on hold at 6.5 per cent on Wednesday and until at least April, when it would hike again before pausing for at least another year.

But the rupee is likely to find it difficult to regain lost ground without the central bank's support.

"Despite the current relief for the INR, India remains vulnerable to domestic and external woes. Its weak external fundamentals leave it prone to another round of sell-offs," noted Amy Yuan Zhuang, chief Asia analyst at Nordea.

"Moreover, a liquidity crunch in the financial system combined with excessive bad debts among banks diminishes confidence in Indian assets," she added.