Going long on the rupee with borrowed dollars offered the best returns in the past month in Asia.
The
carry trade for the Indian
rupee is getting boosted after a shock $20 billion tax cut by the
government.
The
corporate
tax reduction announced on Friday has spurred $374 million of
inflows into Indian stocks in three days, and supported the rupee.
That’s adding to the attractiveness of the currency for carry-trade
strategies, according to UBS Group AG and Kotak Securities Ltd.
With
the world’s pile of negative debt almost doubling to $15 trillion
this year, investors are increasingly employing currency-related
strategies that allow them to squeeze more yields. Going long on the
rupee with borrowed dollars offered the best returns in the past
month in Asia.
“The
corporate tax cuts are a response to mounting growth pessimism, and
should stem Indian equity outflows,” said Rohit Arora, emerging
market Asia strategist at UBS. “This, in our view, works well
enough for the rupee carry trades and lower volatility in the
near-term.”
Carry
trades work by investors borrowing in a lower-yielding currency, such
as the yen or the euro, and putting the money into one with higher
rates. Indian sovereign bonds offer the second-highest yields among
major bond markets in Asia.
Still,
growing fears of a global recession have dented risk appetite for
emerging markets, with returns from purchasing developing nation
currencies with dollars easing since July, according to a Bloomberg
index. India is also tussling with its slowest growth in six years.
“Domestic
risks abated after multi pronged measures to boost growth made rupee
a preferred carry currency,” said Anindya Banerjee, a currency
analyst at Kotak Securities. Another trade in vogue is shorting the
yuan and going long on the rupee to take advantage of the trade
tension risks that the Chinese currency faces, he said.
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