Economic news

India Inflows Spark $120B Hedging as Exporters Return

MUMBAI, July 9 (Reuters) - Indian exporters sharply increased foreign exchange hedging in June after the central bank's measures to attract dollar inflows tempered expectations of a sharp rupee depreciation, while importers also took advantage ​of a recovery in the currency.

Exporters booked a record $46.3 billion of hedges during the month, ‌up 45% from a year earlier and 46% from May. Importers, meanwhile, bought protection worth nearly $74 billion, up 55% year-on-year and 5% from May.

Cumulative activity stood at $120 billion in June, a record tally, per clearing house data. The flows point to a market ​where exporters no longer expect the rupee to keep depreciating incessantly, while importers remain inclined to hedge ​on dollar-rupee dips amid uncertainty over oil prices and global risks.

"The outlook for the INR ⁠has shifted, with market expectations of significant depreciation receding. This change is reflected in client hedging patterns, with ​exporters, who had previously remained on the sidelines, increasing their hedging activity," said Sameer Karyatt, managing director and head ​of trading at DBS Bank India.

Last month, the Reserve Bank of India announced a raft of measures to bolster dollar inflows. Analysts expect the steps to attract $40 billion-$80 billion, with most of it likely to flow into the RBI's reserves via a swap window, ​strengthening the central bank's ability to support the rupee.

RUSH FOR PROTECTION

Corporate FX hedging has been trending higher since ​the Middle East war began in late February. Between March and June, average monthly hedging stood at $102.4 billion, up from $74 billion ‌in the ⁠same time frame last year.

"There has been a noticeable increase in hedging, especially on the importer side, in recent months. Corporates appear to be reassessing the volatility regime for the rupee, and that is leading to a more structural change in hedging behavior," said Ishan Nijhawan - assistant vice president at Mecklai Financial.

RUPEE SWINGS

The RBI's measures helped arrest ​a months-long slide in ​the rupee, allowing it to ⁠recover from an all-time low of nearly 97 per dollar to around 94.

That recovery, however, has recently lost momentum, with recurring bouts of Middle East tensions reviving concerns over ​oil prices and pushing down the rupee to 95.50 per dollar.

The data shows ​that long-tenor dollar ⁠buying jumped sharply in June, suggesting some importers and borrowers with foreign currency liabilities took advantage of lower hedging costs to lock in longer-term protection.

Looking ahead, analysts say that expectations of a persistently weakening rupee may have eased, but ⁠the central ​bank's buying of FX to shore up reserves could cap gains.

"While ​exporters may hedge opportunistically, importers are likely to be more aggressive and would look to hedge on any dips in USD/INR," said Abhishek Goenka, ​chief executive at FX advisory firm IFA Global.

Reporting by Jaspreet Kalra, Nimesh Vora; Editing by Sonia Cheema

Source: Reuters


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