Rupee recovers; stocks down

Wednesday, 26 June 2013 00:37 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Reuters: The rupee recovered from a near seven-month low on Tuesday, after a State-controlled bank intervened to stabilise the currency, dealers said, but depreciation pressure remained due to dollar demand from foreign investors who were selling long tenure bonds before exiting. The lowest trade was at 129.00 per dollar, but one of the two State-run banks, through which the central bank usually directs the market, sold dollars to selected banks to ease depreciation pressure, dealers said. The currency closed at 128.70/80, edging up from Monday’s close of 128.90/129.00. “Foreign investors are basically booking their profits in treasury bonds and locking in short term T-bills,” a currency dealer said on condition of anonymity. “Going forward, we expect the depreciation pressure to remain until the market sees inflows from scheduled foreign borrowings by some banks.” The Central Bank, however, said the volume in bond sales by foreign investors on Tuesday was very thin and had no impact on the currency. “Bond sales by foreign investors were just $14 million out of a portfolio of more than $3 billion. This is insignificant,” Central Bank Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal told Reuters. Foreign investors have been shifting to treasury bills while selling longer tenure T-bonds, the latest central bank data showed on Friday, as a rise in US treasury yields has prompted many offshore investors to rush to the exits. Three local banks have planned to borrow up to $1.5 billion by tapping global capital markets. The rupee fell 0.33% last week, after losing 1.6% in the week previous to that, which currency dealers attributed to foreign investors selling debt as part of a broader selloff in emerging markets. Sri Lanka’s main stock index fell 1.03% or 63.16 points to 6,086.22, its lowest since 3 May on concerns over a possible pullout by more foreign funds. The market witnessed net foreign outflows of Rs. 38.7 million on Tuesday in thin foreign trading. The Bourse has seen a net foreign inflow of Rs. 16.21 billion so far this year. The day’s turnover was at Rs. 455.4 million ($ 3.53 million), less than the half of this year’s daily average of around Rs. 1 billion.

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