The equity markets posted their biggest fall in six months, while the rupee and government bonds plunged further after India’s current account deficit (CAD) widened the most since 2013.
The current account gap widened to $15.8 billion in June — 2.4 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) — because of increase in oil payments. Investors were spooked by fears that the CAD might widen further, amid worsening domestic fundamentals. This caused a sharp correction across equities, bonds, and currency markets.
The benchmark Sensex fell 468 points, or 1.22 per cent, to 37,922, while the Nifty50 index ended at 11,438.1, down 151 points or 1.3 per cent — most since March 16. Both the blue chip-focused indices saw their biggest signal-day drop since August 16.
ALSO READ: Fiscal reforms during the Vajpayee era
The benchmark 10-year government bond yield spiked 13 basis points to 8.16 per cent — a level last seen in November 2014 — on concerns that the RBI might have to raise rates aggressively to tackle the currency weakness.
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) on Monday sold shares worth Rs 8.4 billion, extending their one-month selling to over Rs 50 billion. Global investor sentiment towards emerging markets such as India has been weak following a rout in the currency market.
“Given India runs a CAD, it remains vulnerable to bouts of global risk aversion. Higher oil prices and portfolio outflows are its key external vulnerabilities. Aside from these, the key risks stem from the government turning populist ahead of the 2019 general elections and a sharper-than-expected domestic growth slowdown, triggering equity outflows,” said Nomura in a note.
ALSO READ: Staying calm
FPI selling from the debt market has been even more pronounced. FPIs have pulled out $700 million from debt markets this month and $6.33 billion so far in 2018. Radhika Rao, economist, DBS Bank, said global volatility was hurting India’s balance of payments, forecasting the CAD to widen further.
“For the year, the CAD is likely to widen further, inferring from a jump in the goods trade deficit in the third quarter, resumption of FPI outflows after a brief pause in July-August, and a moderation in service trade surpluses,” she said in a note.
Experts said cracks have started to build in the equity markets, which have so far been resilient to the currency weakness.
“The persistent weakness in the Indian rupee is now starting to show its impact on all asset classes, including equities,” said Jagannadham Thunuguntla, head of research, Centrum Wealth, adding, “The sentiment risk is now the major challenge for stock markets.”
Thunuguntla said investors need to be careful and limit their exposure to export-oriented sectors and zero-debt companies as bond yields have risen to multi-year highs.
Dhananjay Sinha, strategist at Emkay Global Financial Services, said the CAD could widen to 2.5 per cent due to rising commodity prices and possible FPI outflows. He said the rupee could weaken to as low as 75 against the dollar and the 10-year benchmark bond yield could reach 8.4 per cent.