7/22/2023

Indian Rupee Avoided Like the Plague as It's Always Falling in Value

It’s time for Indians to get real about the Indian rupee’s global role. India’s botched effort to bypass the dollar to buy Russian oil shows the limits to internationalizing its currency.

A year ago, there was palpable excitement in New Delhi around buying Russian crude. The Reserve Bank of India allowed foreign banks to open special rupee accounts with local lenders to encourage trade settled in its home currency. Moscow-based Sberbank and VTB Bank were the first to come on board. The idea was that importers would credit these accounts, whose surplus could be invested in Indian government bonds.

For sellers of Russia’s flagship Urals crude in the spot market, avoiding dollar clearance meant bypassing the Western banking system and sanctions.

Yet, the plan hasn’t really worked. Russia’s banks are reluctant to accumulate balances with lenders in India in a non-convertible currency that has lost half its value against the dollar over the past 15 years. Throw into the calculation an expected annual rate of 3% to 4% currency depreciation, and earning a 7% yield on a 10-year rupee bond doesn't seem like such a big draw.

Why is the Indian rupee always falling in value? That's because India runs a chronically huge overall trade deficit every year. Hence in the foreign exchange market, there are always more Indian importers selling the rupee to buy foreign currencies than Indian exporters buying rupee against their trade receipts. As importer supply of rupee overwhelm exporter demand for rupee, the rupee naturally falls in value.

Anonymous

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Indian "currency that has lost half its value against the dollar over the past 15 years" - so how much have Temasek and GIC's investments in India lost their value over the past 2 decades based on rupee foreign exchange translation losses alone ?

Anonymous said...

Stupid people are extremely stubborn.

Gamblers would double the bets when losing.

Gamblers gambling with OPM would want 'all in' to make or break. They have nothing to lose. May even have a cut from the winnings of the opposite side. They cannot lose.

Anonymous said...

The beauty of using OPM to gamble is a win win situation for exploitation. High risk can be taken, and if high returns are made, high bonuses are the result. If high losses result, there is the contract to fall back on, with high compensation to match, if they take responsibility and bite the bullet by being told to quit.

You see, it is a win win situation taking care of OPM. That is why some jobs are always held by some selected people, with even the prerogative to resign and the privilege to return to the same position after resigning.