Rupee cracks to 2016-low on funds exodus; ends at 68.76

November 28, 2016 07:33 pm | Updated 07:36 pm IST - Mumbai

NEW DELHI: RUPEE VS DOLLAR  . PTI GRAPHICS(PTI11_28_2016_000251B)

NEW DELHI: RUPEE VS DOLLAR . PTI GRAPHICS(PTI11_28_2016_000251B)

The rupee on Monday tumbled by 30 paise to end at a fresh 2016-low of 68.76 due to deteriorating sentiment in the midst of worsening impact of fund outflows.

Frantic dollar demand from corporates along with aggressive hedging strategy adopted by importers in the wake of currency volatility predominately took a toll on domestic unit despite moves by the central bank to stabilise the currency.

Massive funds outflows in the wake of impending U.S. Fed rate hike and a bullish dollar overseas have hit the rupee sentiment, a Forex dealer commented.

Ongoing redemption pressure on foreign currency non-resident (FCNR) deposits also aided to the rupee woes, the dealer said further.

At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the local unit opened modestly higher at 68.42 from last Friday’s closing value of 68.46.

However, the initial positive momentum failed to gain ground with the currency retreating sharply to hit a intraday low of 68.80 before ending at 68.76 — its lowest closing level so far this year — showing a steep loss of 30 paise, 0.44 per cent.

The rupee has shed 3.95 per cent of its value since the beginning of 2016.

The rupee had plunged to a record low of 68.8650 in day trade last Thursday before recovering on RBI intervention to settle at 68.74 — the lowest level in 39 months.

It had closed at a record low of 68.80 on August 28, 2013 impacted by the so-called taper tantrum after the Fed’s signal to end its unprecedented bond purchases.

Foreign investors have pulled out close to $5 billion from the capital markets in November so far amid concerns over the impact of demonetisation coupled with fears of rate hike by the U.S. Federal Reserve.

In worldwide trade, the greenback fell back modestly against all its major rivals at the beginning of the week after its longest winning streak in three years.

The dollar has strengthened nearly 6 per cent so far this month after the U.S. presidential election outcome as markets speculated buoyant fiscal stimulus to boost economy that will boost inflation and aggressive Fed rate hike cycle.

The U.S. dollar index was quoted higher at 101.51 in late afternoon.

Meanwhile, the RBI on Monday fixed the reference rate for the dollar at 68.7235 and euro at 73.1768.

In cross-currency trades, the rupee firmed up further against the pound sterling to settle at 85.26 from 85.28 in previous close. But it fell back against the euro to finish at 72.92 as compared to 72.53 previously. It also drifted down against the Japanese yen to conclude at 61.22 from 60.66 per 100 yens earlier.

Country’s foreign exchange reserves fell sharply by $1.542 billion to $365.499 billion in the week to November 18.

The outflows on account of selling by foreign investors and hedge funds remained unabated for the fourth straight week with $737.49 million of outflows from equities and debt markets.

In the forward market, premium for dollar edged up further due to sustained paying pressure from corporates.

The benchmark six-month premium for April rose to 103—105 paise from 99—103 paise and the far-forward October 2017 contract also firmed up to 251—253 paise from 248—252 paise from 230—233 last weekend.

Meanwhile, the BSE Sensex rose nearly 34 points to close at 26,350.17, while the broader Nifty added 12.60 points to 8,126.90.

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