Indian rupee hits record low on rate hike worries

Currency weighed down by rising oil prices, capital outflows in emerging markets


Afp June 14, 2022
Indian Rupee notes are seen in this picture illustration taken in Mumbai June 12, 2013. PHOTO: REUTERS

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MUMBAI:

The Indian rupee plunged to a record low against the dollar on Monday, ahead of an expected US interest rate hike this week, aimed at fighting surging inflation.

The rupee hit 78.2825 per dollar for the first time as a forecast-beating US inflation report on Friday heightened prospects for a further tightening of monetary policy by the Federal Reserve.

The benchmark Sensex Index slid as much as 2.1% as foreigners took out about $24 billion from local stocks, Bloomberg News reported.

The Indian currency has been weighed down by rising oil prices, a more aggressive Fed and by capital outflows in emerging markets, as foreign investors turn risk-averse.

Central banks have adopted more hawkish policies in recent months, including in India, with the Reserve Bank hiking borrowing costs by 50 basis points last week for the second time in as many months.

The RBI earlier announced an out-of-cycle 0.4% rate rise in May.

India’s central bank has also been selling off foreign currency to stabilise the currency.

Inflation has also jumped in India owing the fallout from the Ukraine war, overshooting the central bank’s 2-6% target range from January to April.

It hit an eight-year high of 7.79% in April, fanned by a spike in food and fuel costs.

In May, the government banned exports of wheat, with yields already hit by a heat wave, to rein in prices.

Sugar exports were also capped to safeguard supplies, while the government cut duties on fuel and edible oils.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 14th, 2022.

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