National News

Yearender 2020: Worst performing Asian currency is rupee this year

The rupee has depreciated 3.5 per cent to 73.52 per dollar. Analysts have explained that the rupee has performed poorly because of weaker economic activities.

Sentinel Digital Desk

New Delhi: The Indian currency has been the worst-performing Asian currency in 2020, with a week left for the year to end. With this, the currency is heading for the third yearly decline against the American dollar.

So far this year, the rupee has depreciated 3.5 per cent to 73.52 per dollar.

Analysts say that the underperformance is on the back of the central bank's dollar buying and weaker domestic economic activities following the COVID-19 outbreak.

In 2020, has received more than $50 billion through the FPI and FDI routes. Foreigners have bought equities worth $17.7 billion and sold $14.5 billion in debt with net inflows of $7.7 billion in CY2020, as per official data from NSDL.

However, a recent report by HDFC Securities noted that despite substantial foreign inflows, the rupee did not revive since the RBI absorbed almost all dollar inflows through regular interventions to restrict the currency from appreciating to maintain export competitiveness.

The brokerage expects the rupee to trade lower at the start of 2021 on the back of bearish dollar momentum, loose monetary policy from the Federal Reserve.

However, RBI's dollar buying could restrict the downside in USD-INR and the brokerage believes the pair is expected to trade in a broad range of 71 to 76 in 2021.

Axis Securities noted that going forward the key events that will decide the direction of the dollar is, how quickly president Biden will be able to push expected fiscal stimulus and smaller stimulus package could tilt the needle on Fed to do more to revive the economy by keeping the rate lower or even closer to Zero for an extended period of time.

Among other trading currencies, the rupee depreciated more than 10 per cent against the Euro, reflecting the Euro's strength against the US dollar. The better-than-expected economic recovery, ultra-loose monetary policy, possibly reserve rebalancing flows and risk-on sentiment support the Euro's strength.

The Sterling Pound gained a percentage point versus the dollar and 4.2 per cent versus the rupee, so far this year while the Japanese Yen has appreciated more than 4 per cent versus the dollar so far this year despite the country having run into trade deficits.