Burgeoning Trade Deficit Likely To Weaken Rupee

A widening trade deficit is likely to weaken the Indian rupee in the second half of 1997-98, said NatWest Securities yesterday.
We see the Indian rupee trading against the dollar in the 35.8-36.0 range in the first quarter of 1998, but weakening to 36.8 against the dollar by October/November 1997, and further to Rs 37.4 by end-March 1998, it said in a forex update.
We have revised our export growth projection for 1998 down to 8.0 per cent, although consensus expectation is still 15-20 per cent, the securities firm said.
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Rising imports will increase the trade deficit and push the Indian rupee down, it predicted.
The rupee was trading at 35.777/785 against the $ yesterday.The rupee appreciated nearly 0.5 per cent against the dollar in April. At this point, it is overvalued in real effective exchange rate terms by nearly 5.5 per cent, said NatWest Securities.
The recent surge in foreign inflows led to expectations of further inflows, this has derailed the rupee completely and fuelled the current bullishness. However, the cyclical pattern of such expectations in the past leads us to the conclusion that the rupee will weaken from the second quarter of 1998 onwards, it added.
The update said trade flows were a significant force in the Indian foreign exchange market and account for more than half of the average market turnover.
While the long-run direction of the rupee is benchmarked by purchasing power parity (PPP), the short-term movements have to be seen in the light of traders expectations, it said, adding: We observe that speculation by exporters and importers on the trade account further exacerbates the volatility of the rupee.
NatWest said it expected inflows through NRI deposits to moderate in 1998. Inflows through FIIs and GDR investments are unpredictable, but there is no reason to be very optimistic given the current political uncertainty, said NatWest.
Net inflows through external commercial borrowings will be higher in 1998. However, the trade deficit will also be significantly higher. Hence inflows in 1998 will be far lower than in 1997, NatWest said.
As consumption demand improves, the trade deficit will widen and the forward rates will again firm to 5-6 per cent, it said. Six month annualised forward premiums are currently below 4.5 per cent.
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First Published: Jun 10 1997 | 12:00 AM IST

