The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) kept its policy rate unchanged at 5.25% at its latest meeting yesterday. The forecast for economic growth was raised from 7.3% to 7.4% and that for consumer price index (CPI) inflation was raised from 2.0% to 2.1%. Mint. Earlier, the US Federal Reserve had voted to hold its lending rate at 3.5% to 3.75%, "citing still-elevated inflation alongside solid economic growth, ad giving little indication in its latest policy statement of when borrowing costs may fall again." Reuters. The hawkish outlook from the Fed meant that "The US dollar hit a two-week high...as fresh volatility gripped stocks and the pound tumbled after the Bank of England voted by a razor-thin margin to leave UK rates unchanged." Reuters.The rupee has strengthened by almost Rs 2 against the dollar, from 92.043 on 28 January to 90.596 to one dollar yesterday. Investing.com. Perhaps the RBI does not want any pressure on the rupee as traders look for risk-off investments. In good news, India's foreign currency reserves jumped to $723.8 billion in the week ending 30 January, "providing a robust merchandise imports cover of more than 11 months." Foreign currency reserves fell by $493 million but the value of gold reserves jumped by $14.59 billion as the price of gold soared on the spot market. ET. Since then the price of gold has crashed from a high of $5,400.25 per ounce to $4,961.15 yesterday. Investing,com. India and the RBI have not forgotten the crisis of 1991 when our forex reserves fell to just $1.2 billion, barely enough to cover 3 weeks of essential imports. India had to airlift 47 tons of gold to the Bank of England and another 20 tons to the Union Bank of Switzerland to raise $600 million and avert the crisis. wikipedia. When asked, former RBI Governor Prof Raghuram Rajan "reportedly said there was no point at which a country could feel safe, unless it had accumulated trillions of dollars like China." We gain foreign exchange from exports, foreign direct investment (FDI), overseas loans and remittances by Indian expatriates. "The Indian diaspora sent home $135.46 billion in the last fiscal year, the highest on record." And the highest in the world. ET. The concern is that remittances are much higher than FDI. Between 2014-15, FDI, which is expected to be long term has been steady at around $30 billion annually, while foreign portfolio investment (FPI), which is short term, has been volatile. However, repatriation of FDI "jumped from $18 billion pre-pandemic to $44 billion and $51 billion in 2023-24 and 2024-25 respectively." And, outward investment by Indian entities doubled from $13 billion in 2019-20 to $28 billion in 2024-25. Mint. The RBI has played safe. Which is good because the world seems unpredictable. We could face the unexpected. Suddenly.
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