Re may appreciate to 79/$: UBS Sec

Re may appreciate to 79/$: UBS Sec 

Re may appreciate to 79/$: UBS Sec

  • Mumbai: Narrowing current account deficit will help the rupee strengthen against the dollar and appreciate to around 79 by the second half of the current fiscal, says a fo reign brokerage report.
  • The rupee is likely to strengthen towards 79 by end- FY24 from an average of 82 to the dollar in FY23, Tanvee Gupta Jain, the chief India economist at UBS Securities said in a note. Even as the spillover. pee is likely to be volatile in the near-term, as global financial stability risks remain elevated, she expects the local unit to gain towards 79 against the greenback by year- end FY24, on a narrowing current account deficit (CAD) and weaker dollar volatility index. CAD narrowed to 2.2% of GDP or $18.2 billion in the third quarter and the Swiss brokerage UBS Securities se- es it further improving to 1.2% of GDP in the current fiscal from an estimated 2% in the just concluded fiscal. Jain said the Reserve Bank will cap any significant rupee ga…
  • It can be noted that last year the central bank used up as much as $115 billion to defend the rupee, which was under vices exports. pressure due to the rising interest rates across the world and the US in particular. On the FY24 outlook she says even though the global financial market volatility has significantly clouded the growth outlook for all, the domestic economy will suffer limited spillover from the strains of the US/Europe and banking sectors.
  • The ongoing global Crisis has led to major repricing in global rates volatility and commodities, especially oil. The agency estimates crude price to average at $80/barrel in FY24 down from $95 a barrel in FY23. The better show in Q3 deficit was led by a narrowed goods trade deficit along with a record high services exports.
  • The monthly goods trade deficit narrowed significant- ly to 6.2% of GDP annualized in February from a peak of 10.8% of GDP in September 2022, as imports slowed more than exports on easing global commodity prices and weakening domestic demand. That said, services exports have been resilient so far in FY23, at $326 billion, up 1.7x from the FY20 level. This has the country's share in global services trade share rising to 4 % in 2021 from 3.4% in 2019.
  • The pick-up in services exports has been largely driven by software and business consulting services.'
  • But Jain expects the growth to moderate going forward as more than 50% of our software services exports go to the US and Canada as the agency believes that the US economy is heading for a hard landing in 2023.

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