Search Result for : Currencies

LIBOR to be phased out by 2021!

By Abin Daya The LIBOR is dead! Well, not quite. But in the next 4 years, it could be. The The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) announced this week that it intended to phase out the LIBOR by 2021. Post that, banks would no longer be compelled to provide interest quotes to the Inter-Continental Exchange, and in the absence of these, the benchmark would die a natural death. What comes after that? We don’t know yet. But the first item this week is something closer home – India’s foreign trade numbers for the month of June. Apart from what is included in the update, I also tried to explore if there was some sort of correlation between industrial production growth and export performance. ...

Indias exporters could face challenges with continued appreciation of the rupee, Ajay Sahai

The Dollar Business The industry body FIEO forecast challenges for the exporters if the rupee continued appreciating in the future. Global trade is expected to grow at 2.4% in 2017, and there is likelihood of extreme instability in currencies. Though the rupee has gained against the dollar, and since competing currencies of other countries could depreciate further, rupee’s appreciation could hurt India’s competitiveness in its labour intensive business units especially sectors such as agro-products industries, handloom, leather, textiles and marine products. The government should support these sectors based on their forex returns so that those companies handling large imports, which will be benefitted with the appreciation are provided less support than those having little or no support. Speaking at a press meet ...

IMF hints at including the renminbi in its SDR list

The Dollar Business Bureau The war against the US dollar’s supremacy seems to be all set for another major battle with even the IMF endorsing China’s push to include the renminbi in the list of currencies in which assets can be held under the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights (SDRs). “While undervaluation of the renminbi was a major factor causing large imbalances in the past, our assessment is that the substantial real effective appreciation over the past year has brought the exchange rate to a level that is no longer undervalued,” IMF’s first deputy managing director David Lipton said recently in Beijing. While Lipton didn’t openly claim that the IMF is ready to include the renminbi in the SDR list, many ...