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India spending forex reserves at quicker pace than during taper tantrum
September 20, 2022
The Reserve Bank of India has sold a net of $38.8 billion from its forex reserves between January and July this year, data released on Friday showed.
A net of $19 billion was sold in July alone, the most recent data available, and intervention remained heavy in August when the rupee fell below 80 against the dollar, traders said.
Alongside its intervention in the spot market, the central bank’s forward dollar holdings have fallen to $22 billion from $64 billion in April.
In 2013, the RBI had sold a net of $14 billion in the June to September period after the so-called taper tantrum-when U.S. Treasury yields spiked after the Federal Reserve said it would slow its pace of bond buybacks-had put pressure on emerging economy currencies, including the rupee.
“The starting point of India’s foreign reserves was at a much higher level in this cycle compared to the taper tantrum, providing a much thicker cushion to withstand global volatility/ shocks,” said Radhika Rao, senior economist at DBS Bank.
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