QUOTE AND NEWS
Business Standard  6 hrs ago  Comment 
AA week of very narrow range trading ended with small positive gains. The Nifty closed at 5,052.45 points for a gain of 1.1 per cent. The Sensex closed up 1.02 per cent at 17,021.85 points. The Defty closed up by 0.65 per cent with the rupee...
The Times of India  Nov 20  Comment 
The rupee today bounced back from its initial losses to close higher by seven paise at 46.61/62 against the US currency on signs of capital inflows by foreign funds amid fresh dollar sales by exporters.
The Economic Times  Nov 20  Comment 
The rupee ended stronger on Friday as a rising stock market and the government saying it wanted more capital inflows helped overcome early selling by importers that has sent the currency to one-week lows.
Commodity Online  Nov 20  Comment 
The Rupee depreciated against the USD in yesterday s trading session to close at 46.68. Rupee closing above its 21Day but below its 55 Day EMA in daily chart.14 Day RSI is at 53 levels.
Reuters  Nov 20  Comment 
Gammon Infrastructure Projects Ltd said on Friday it received an order worth 8.5 billion rupees from the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) for upgradation work in Bihar.
FX Street  Nov 20  Comment 
USDINR Chart GBPUSD Chart
The Economic Times  Nov 20  Comment 
The Indian rupee recovered smartly by 15 paisa to 46.53/54 against the greenback in early trade today on exporters dollar sales amid subdued local stocks.
The Times of India  Nov 20  Comment 
India Value Invest  Nov 20  Comment 
I was recently looking at the list of highest dividend paying companies and found an interesting company named Zodiac-JRD-MKJ which, according to the finished products list on moneycontrol, is a jeweler. The company's balance sheet for FY09 shows...
Reuters  Nov 20  Comment 
Pantaloon Retail (India) Ltd said on Friday it received shareholder's approval for a qualified institutional placement and raise upto 5 billion rupees, it said in a statement to the exchange.
Reuters  Nov 20  Comment 
The rupee further recovered from fresh one-week lows touched early on Friday helped by an over-1 percent rise in local shares but a stronger dollar overseas limited a sharper rise.
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This article discusses the Indian Rupee. For other Rupee currencies, see Rupee (disambiguation).

The chart at left shows the USD/INR currency pair; the number of Indian Rupee equivalent to 1 U.S. Dollar (USD).

Why the rupee is falling against the dollar?

The bankruptcy, sale, restructuring and merger of some of the world's largest financial institutions has caused cataclysmic disruptions in the international stocks and money markets. Analysts have described the events of the last few days as the worst financial crisis ever to have hit the world. Imprudent financial decisions, fed by greed and bad luck, have seen global financial markets collapse.

Did India do anything to save its ass? The global crises saw Indian stock markets crash, but as soon as the USA funneled in $700 billion into the American economy to revive dying markets, India too saw some stability. But the forex market had other plans!

Even as the dollar strengthened, the Indian rupee began to fall alarmingly. The Indian currency has lost almost 18 per cent against the US currency! At a low of 46.99 to the dollar this year that it hit on September 16, while the rupee was trading at 39.40 to the dollar in January this year.

So why is the rupee falling against the dollar, when the global financial crisis should impact the United States the most?

Reasons

  • The American sub-prime crisis that shook the global financial markets has seen unprecedented bailouts and infusion of dollars into the US economy at a cost of many an emerging market, from where funds have been pulled out to plough back into America. India has been one of the worst hit countries on this count, as foreign funds took flight, thereby making dollars scarce and sold more Indian shares than they bought to the tune of over $9 billion.
  • The growing Indian trade deficit and the large fiscal deficit are also contributing to the fall of the rupee. The higher price of imported goods, especially oil that is now ruling at over $107 per barrel, has also led to an increase in domestic inflation and a fall in the value of the Indian currency forcing RBI to raise interest rates. The demand-supply balance and the fundamentals are against the rupee too. Also, the decline in the value of the rupee has coincided with RBI discontinuing its direct sales of dollars to oil firms in early July.
  • One more reason for the fall of the rupee, is the overseas non-deliverable forward (NDF) market that is not sanctioned by the RBI. An NDF is a non-deliverable forward contract where financial institutions buy forward dollars (that is, they book dollars now for delivery at a predetermined future date) in the Indian market and at the same time sell a similar amount of dollars in an overseas market -- or vice-versa

Implications of a falling Rupee

  • Foreign investors will want bigger returns for their money to compensate for the higher risk. This means that the Indian government, companies and individuals will have to pay more for the money they borrow: in other words, higher interest rates.
  • It will increase the Indian government's burden of repaying and servicing foreign debt.
  • Discourage FII's from pouring funds into the Indian markets.

Indian corporates which could borrow from the overseas markets at cheaper rates to finance their expansion plans will be badly affected.

Solution

  • RBI can sell dollars in the open market to bring down the value of the US greenback, albeit slightly.
  • Monetary Policy to defend the rupee's value. Short-term interest rates changes do impact the value of the rupee against other currencies. But, the RBI has mostly used the policy to stabilise internal conditions, like steps to control rising inflation.
  • However, if the Indian stock markets boom -- like they did in the last couple of years it could provide a shot in the arm for more global funds to invest in India thereby strengthening the rupee as the demand for the dollar in the local markets drops

Why the rupee is rising against the pound and euro?

Is it only because GBP and Euro are generally trading weak against all the currencies or is it a more profound impact of Balance of Payment with the Euro area?

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