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Indian rupee is worst Asian currency in U-turn as yuan carry trades unwindA surge in the Japanese yen has upended carry trades with the effect rippling as far as the Mexican currency and technology stocks in the United States.
Reuters
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>A customer holds hundred rupees Indian currency notes.</p></div>

A customer holds hundred rupees Indian currency notes.

Credit: Reuters Photo

Mumbai: The Indian rupee is now the worst-performing Asian currency -- a U-turn from being the leader in the first half of the year -- pressured by the unwinding of trades that used the Chinese yuan to fund long bets on the local currency.

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The rupee weakened to an all-time low of 83.8450 per US dollar on Monday. It has hit record lows in two of three sessions this month after declining 0.4 per cent in July.

In contrast, Asian currencies climbed by about 1 per cent last month, led by the Malaysian ringgit's jump of more than 4 per cent.

The contrasting fortunes have carried over into August. The offshore Chinese yuan climbed to nearly 7.11 on Monday, its best level since the first week of this year.

Investors had bought the rupee against the yuan in the first half of the year looking to benefit from the rupee's comparatively higher yield and counting on contained volatility in both currencies.

These trades are now unwinding amid a rally in the yuan and a pickup in volatility, proving to be a headwind for the rupee.

Most high-yielding currencies are getting hit due to the quick unwind of carry trades globally and the rupee has been among the most attractive carry plays in Asia, said Charu Chanana, head of FX strategy at Saxo Singapore.

The offshore yuan's 1-month realized volatility has jumped to more than 5 per cent, the highest since November, from about 1 per cent in early July.

It climbed nearly 3 per cent over the last one month against the rupee, which would hurt returns from the carry trades.

"On our side, we are witnessing big buying (on USD/INR in the non-deliverable forwards) market," the head of proprietary trading at a foreign bank said.

"(I) think a large part of it is due to unwinding of the cross-INR carry trades, particularly yuan."

A surge in the Japanese yen has upended carry trades with the effect rippling as far as the Mexican currency and technology stocks in the United States.

The yen has rallied over 6.5 per cent against the US dollar since the Bank of Japan's unexpectedly hawkish rate hike last Wednesday.

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(Published 05 August 2024, 15:10 IST)