India is Asia’s weakest link in QE-driven rout
India’s rupee currency has weakened the most among emerging markets after the South African rand since May as investors flee assets most vulnerable to the end of super-loose US monetary policy.
As financial markets sell off on concerns over rising US rates, what happens in India, an economy with slowing growth and a heavy dependence on foreign money, could well determine if this is merely a short-term rout or a full-blown crisis.
India’s rupee currency has weakened the most among emerging markets after the South African rand since May as investors flee assets most vulnerable to the end of super-loose US monetary policy.
Other markets are falling, albeit to a smaller extent, due to a reversal in flows received since 2008 when the Federal Reserve embarked on the first of its series of stimulus programmes. Stock and bond markets in Thailand, Indonesia and Philippines have suffered massive outflows of funds.
“There was a lot of hot money in Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines and these remain the most vulnerable as long as the contagion persists,” said Tim Condon, Asia economist at ING, based in Singapore.
“If one domino were to fall, I would be looking at India because of the current account deficit.”
Condon thinks the odds of a wider contagion descending into a regional crisis, like in 2007 or in 1997, are extremely low.