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Foreign Investors Pare India Rate-Hike Bets, Fuel Record 5-Year Swap Trading

MUMBAI, July 8 (Reuters) - A rush by foreign investors to unwind bets on interest rate hikes in India has pushed turnover ​in the country's five-year overnight index swap market to a record ‌high, signalling a return of market confidence.

Turnover in the five-year swap , a key gauge of policy rate expectations, jumped to a record 253 billion rupees ($2.65 billion) on Wednesday, ​breaking past 236 billion rupee notional contracts clocked on Tuesday. ​The volume is nearly three times the average daily volume so ⁠far this year.

Some market participants had accumulated sizeable positions for a ​series of "front-loaded" rate hikes in quick succession on concerns over inflation and rupee ​weakness, Mandar Pitale, head of treasury at SBM Bank (India), said.

Those positions are being unwound aggressively, he said.

On Tuesday, India's five-year OIS fell to a four-month low of 6.1%, ​only 10 basis points above where it was before the start of ​the Iran war.

The key rate had climbed to about 6.9% in April, with investors ‌factoring ⁠in up to 125 basis points of rate increases.

These expectations have since been pared significantly as the Reserve Bank of India last month unveiled a series of measures to boost inflows and support the rupee, prompting a scaling ​back of bets ​that it would ⁠tighten monetary policy to defend the currency.

The rupee, which fell to a record low of 96.96 per dollar on ​May 20, has risen 1.5% since then, though it ​has come ⁠under renewed pressure after U.S. President Donald Trump said the ceasefire with Iran was "over".

Expectations of sizeable foreign-exchange inflows have improved sentiment toward the rupee, limiting ⁠the ​risk that currency volatility could push offshore OIS ​rates higher, Duncan Tan, APAC rates strategist at HSBC, said in a note on Wednesday.

($1 = ​95.5750 Indian rupees)

Reporting by Dharamraj Dhutia and Nimesh Vora; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala

Source: Reuters


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