Rupee\'s year-end rally heralds a brighter 2019 as oil slumps

By Subhadip Sircar

Tumbling oil prices have delivered an early Christmas present to India’s currency market, with the rally that’s put the rupee on course for its best quarter since March 2017 seen extending into the new year.

That’s the message from strategists coming off a largely painful 2018, as elevated energy costs and a strong dollar combined to make the rupee Asia’s worst performer. The slump in crude and hopes of a slowdown in the pace of tightening by the Federal Reserve mean the high-yielding currency may resume its winning ways next year, strategists say.

Rupee snip 3

“We expect the rupee to be a top performer, particularly on a total return basis,” said Dushyant Padmanabhan, a strategist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Singapore. “We expect a reversal of the underperformance from prior months and a recovery amid low oil prices, a less hawkish Fed and an improving portfolio flow outlook.”

Cheaper oil and a central bank that’s boosting the amount of money it’s adding to the economy have driven gains in Indian assets this week. Because Asia’s third-largest economy relies on imports to meet its energy requirements, higher crude prices sent the rupee to multiple lows in October and spurred foreigners to pull about $12 billion from local stocks and bonds in 2018.

The rupee jumped 2.1 percent over Monday and Tuesday, its biggest two-day advance since September 2013. It dropped 0.3 percent to 70.58 per dollar at 9:30 a.m. in Mumbai, still up 2.7 percent this quarter for the best performance in Asia after Indonesia’s rupiah.

National Vote
To be sure, the turn in sentiment could still unravel if Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whose party was rocked by defeats in key regional elections recently, fails to win a second term at general elections due by May. Rupee forecasters’ base case is that the Bharatiya Janata Party will return to power with the help of coalition allies.

“The market has priced in return of the incumbent with reduced majority,” said Aditya Pugalia, Dubai-based director of financial markets at Emirates NBD PJSC. “Should that not happen and results throw up a fragile coalition, then it will put the rupee under pressure.”

The rupee will end 2019 at 71.15 per dollar, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists. The currency ended at 70.40 per dollar on Wednesday.

Here are some more comments from strategists:

Nomura (Dushyant Padmanabhan)

ANZ (Khoon Goh, head of Asia research)
Emirates NBD (Aditya Pugalia)

Rabobank ( Hugo Erken, senior economist)