Rupee\, bonds surge on lower oil prices\, RBI announcement

Rupee, bonds surge on lower oil prices, RBI announcement

Reuters  |  MUMBAI 

By Suvashree Choudhury

MUMBAI (Reuters) - The Indian rupee and bonds gained in early trade on Wednesday, boosted by a fall in global prices and on the central bank's announcement a day earlier that it would buy bonds via open market operations.

At 0433 GMT, the rupee was at 72.12 to the dollar, its strongest since Sept. 21 and compared with 72.6750 on Tuesday, while the yield on the benchmark 10-year bond was at 7.72 percent, its lowest since Aug. 2. The paper had ended at 7.76 percent on Tuesday.

Dealers expect the rupee and bonds to be on a strong footing going ahead as prices remain soft and domestic inflation has been falling sharply.

"The domestic macro factors are working in favour of after the fall in inflation and we expect foreign investors to come back to bonds sooner than later with the rupee improving," said a at a foreign

India's headline annual consumer inflation fell to a 13-month low of 3.31 percent in October, below the central bank's medium term inflation target of 4 percent, spurring hopes of interest rates being kept on hold for the next few months.

However, the gains are likely to be capped in domestic markets ahead of state elections due in the next few weeks and a lack of clarity on the outcome of an ongoing rift between the central and the government, dealers said.

The and the government have been embroiled in a war of words since end-October after called for greater operational autonomy for the central

Top finance ministry officials have been piling pressure on the central bank to accede to their demands of easier lending rules, lower capital requirements and a higher share of RBI's reserves, all of which will be taken up at the central bank's board meeting on Monday.

"While and inflation are important factors, we will also have to keep an eye on how much say does the government have on the central bank to understand how the outlook on growth and rates will shape up," said an at a

struggled to keep their footing on Wednesday after plunging 7 percent in the previous session, with surging supply and the spectre of faltering demand keeping investors on the edge.

imports more than two-thirds of its and changes in have implications on its fiscal cost, current account deficit and inflation.

Separately, the said on Tuesday it will buy 120 billion rupees ($1.65 billion) of government bonds on Thursday via open market operations.

($1 = 72.6100 Indian rupees)

(Additional reporting Savio Shetty, Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips and Sunil Nair)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, November 14 2018. 10:13 IST