Why Indian rupee might fall to 19 versus dirham

A trader looks at a screen at a stock brokerage firm in MumbaiAt least two major global investment banks are maintaining that the beleaguered Indian rupee, which is already down about 15 per cent since the beginning of 2013, could see a further deterioration of about 10.5 per cent in the near future and slump to Rs70 against the US dollar.
That would equate to a level of Rs19 against the UAE dirham, and if attained, this exchange rate is likely to prompt a surge in remittances by expat Indians in the UAE and across the Gulf and indeed the world.
Zurich-headquartered UBS as well as the Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank both believe that the Indian rupee will continue its plunge and will probably hit the Rs70-level against the US dollar sometime soon. While UBS hasn’t offered a timeframe in its forecast, Deutsche Bank maintains that the rupee could see that level in a month or so.
A note issued yesterday by the bank says: “We continue to believe that fundamentally the rupee is undervalued and has overshot its equilibrium level substantially, but as numerous episodes of past currency crises have amply demonstrated, under a scenario of deep pessimism, currencies can overshoot substantially and remain so for a long time.”
It added: “India, we fear, is entering such a zone.”
The Indian rupee has been on a steep downward journey for some time now, especially since the beginning of May this year, having lost almost 19 per cent of its value since then. The currency has lost almost half (46.5 per cent) of its worth in the past five years, and if the Rs70 vs. $1 prediction comes true by next month, that would translate into a loss of 61 per cent of its value in 60 months.
Incoming Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Raghuram Rajan, who is scheduled to take over the reins of the RBI from incumbent D. Subbarao next month, has already stated that he doesn’t have a magic wand to set the wrongs in the Indian economy right, suggesting that it is going to be a painfully long path to fiscal fitness.
India has taken a slew of steps of late to arrest the slump in the rupee, including imposing a 10 per cent import duty on gold and silver, repeatedly hiking the price of retail fuel, and imposing foreign investment restrictions on Indian companies.
Yesterday, India also announced a ban on air travellers bringing in flat-panel TVs with them from overseas destinations such as Dubai, Bangkok and Singapore, citing a decline in the rupee. This particular move has angered a large section of non-resident Indians, who maintain that their TV imports have no significant effect on the worth of the rupee since they make such purchases in the currency they earn and spend – and not the Indian rupee.
Further, a section of analysts believes that the country’s financial management team may be barking on the wrong tree. Instead of restricting spending by individuals and corporates, as has been the case so far, they suggest that India should be looking at supplementing foreign revenue. A falling rupee, in that case, is good news for the country’s exporters as it makes their exports more competitive vis-à-vis exports from other countries whose currencies may not have devalued as much as the rupee.-Emirates 24/7

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