The rupee has moved down from Rs 63.61 against the dollar on June 1 to Rs 66.61 on August 24 which is a fall of 4.6 per cent in less than three months, and a loss of 3.9 per cent since end July.
The daily annualised volatility was 5.1 per cent since June with this level going up in August to 6.7 per cent, the agency said.
The hardening of the dollar is expected to hit importers very hard as they face the challenge of paying more rupees for dollars which will affect their expenditure and hence profitability, the agency noted.
A prudent way to tackle this situation is to hedge these positions, it said, adding with the forward premium rates being in the region of 7-7.10 per cent for various tenures, corporates may like to eschew such hedging unless the expectation is that the rupee will fall by a greater level.
The rupee has been buffeted by global developments and while the external fundamentals appear to be strong with forex reserves building up to USD 355 billion, the rupee nonetheless will be guided by external factors.
In FY15, among the various sectors, refining had forex inflows of Rs 2,62,594 crore and outflows of Rs 7,15,141 crore, registering net forex loss of Rs 4,52,547 crore for FY15. Among other industries iron and steel was a big looser to the tune of Rs 30,459 crore, fertilisers Rs 18,714 crore, power sector 13,860 crore, oil exploration Rs 8,771 crore and engineering sector Rs 6,556 crore.
Among other gainers, pharmaceutical sector gained by Rs 2,8,343 crore, textiles 10,598 crore, two-wheelers Rs 8,721 crore, commercial vehicles/tractors Rs 3,829 crore and metals Rs 3,818 crore, it said.
