Rupee could touch 70/dollar in a month: Deutsche Bank

PTI Updated - March 12, 2018 at 04:31 PM.

Photo: P.V Sivakumar

The rupee could touch 70 against the US dollar in a month’s time, although some revival of the currency is expected by the end of the year, Deutsche Bank said in a research note today.

Rupee dropped by 8 paise to 63.33 against the American currency in the late morning trade today. The currency had hit a fresh intra-day low of 64.13 against the USD yesterday.

“Fundamentally the rupee is undervalued and has overshot its equilibrium level substantially,” the German banking major said adding “under a scenario of deep pessimism, currencies can overshoot substantially and remain so for a long time.

India, we fear, is entering such a zone.”

“We now believe that the rupee could touch 70 to the USD in a month or so, although we expect some revival of the currency by the end of the year as the reality of taper turns out to be less disruptive down the road than it is now, and the current account deficit continues to decline,” Deutsche Bank said.

Meanwhile, the Government has taken a slew of measures in recent months to prevent this vicious cycle, and though some of these measures like enhanced provision for FDI are likely to serve India well in the long term, but a number of measures has also suggested “haphazard decision-making”, it said.

The research note further added that episodes of currency crisis also cause a range of negative spillovers, the most crucial of which is the health of the financial sector as rupee depreciation and rising cost of financing will put Indian borrowers under further stress.

According to Deutsche Bank, considering such risks (pushing up bad loans sharply, damaging the balance sheet of corporations and banks), “ratings agencies may be nudged toward a downgrade, although conditions have to be weak for another quarter or two before that were to transpire.”

To prevent the crisis from deepening, Indian authorities need to gear up for recapitalising banks and supporting corporate refinancing, it said.

“Given the weak state of the fiscal position, this may entail a major rethink of the expenditure programme (especially plan spending), accelerated sales of state-owned assets, and a major external bond issuance with a credible set of macro-fiscal-structural policies underlying the programme,” the report added.

Published on August 21, 2013 08:19