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Global investors keen on rupee denominated assets: RBI
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SME Times News Bureau | 27 Aug, 2019
Global investors have shown appetite for rupee denominated assets in
recent times and this trend needs to be strengthened further by policy
nudges, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor B.P. Kanungo has
said.
In his speech at the Forex Association of India Conference
in Singapore, the copy of which was uploaded on the RBI website on
Monday, Kanungo also noted that although the global economic scenario is
not very encouraging, there is, as yet, no room for pessimism.
The
International Monetary Fund (IMF) continues to revise downward the
global growth projections for 2019, although the outlook for 2020 is
more positive. According to the multilateral agency, while growth in
developed countries remains sluggish, the emerging economies, including
China and India, appear to be facing a challenge.
"The policy
regime is also oriented to providing adequate instruments of hedging to
all resident economic agents who have exposure to a foreign currency as
well as all non-residents who have an Indian rupee exposure.
"The
onshore markets are fairly deep and liquid but needs further
strengthening. There is a wide menu of hedging instruments available and
further expansion would be in keeping with understanding of their risk
implication," Kanungo said.
"In recent times, global institutions
and investors have shown a healthy appetite for Rupee denominated
assets, which while ensuring flow of foreign exchange protects the
Indian issuers from exchange risk. This trend needs to be given further
policy nudges", he said.
The Deputy Governor also said the RBI only intervenes in the market to control volatility.
"The
Reserve Bank is mandated to maintain orderly conditions in the foreign
exchange market. Its intervention in the forex market is solely directed
at curbing sudden turbulences not backed by the economic fundamentals.
As has been said repeatedly, market operations are not intended to
achieve any target exchange rate or band of rates," he said.
He
pointed out that the exchange rate dynamics in India for more than a
decade has been driven by capital flows rather than current account
balances.
"Though long-term flows related to FDI (foreign direct
investment) and long-term debt have been fairly stable keeping in tandem
with the economic fundamentals, the portfolio flows have their own
flows have their own dynamics depending as much on attractiveness of
returns of Indian assets as the global factors determining their risk
appetite, he said.
"Gyrations in the forex market in these
circumstances leave no option other than market intervention to restore
orderliness in the market."
He noted that the Indian forex markets have been fairly stable in recent months.
According
to the Deputy Governor, global trade tensions between the two largest
economies -- US and China -- are the dominant theme of discourse
currently.
"As of now, there does not appear to be any
possibility of quick resolution of the tension, nor does it seem to
escalate and get out of hand rapidly in the near future. Whatever may be
the rational and economic logic behind the competitive protectionism
through tariff barriers, it is certainly contributing to the global
economic slowdown," he added.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
₹84.00
|
₹82.25 |
UK Pound
|
₹104.65
|
₹108.10 |
Euro
|
₹92.50
|
₹89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
₹56.10 |
₹54.40 |
As on 25 Jul, 2025 |
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