The Indian rupee stayed stable today, with muted reaction following the latest Reserve Bank of India policy announcement. To be fair, the central bank did not surprise the market, opting to hold interest rates at 8% as expected. What is more surprising was the accompanying statement in which Governor Rajan said that the Central Bank will not be tighten monetary policy further if inflation remains on path to the bank's target.
This is actually a relatively dovish stance and we should have seen some sort of weakness in INR but that did not happen. Prices did rebound from the day's low of 59.90 and pushed all the way up to 60.05 in the couple of hours that followed, but USD/INR quickly fell back once again.
From a technical perspective, this suggests that bearish momentum in the USD/INR remains strong as we are trading below the rising trendline and confluence with the 60.00 round figure. Also, the latest rally failed to even create a new weekly high even though the fundamental case for USD/INR to rally was stronger compared to yesterday. This suggests that prices may be able to retest the current day's low and the likelihood of a move toward last Friday's low and further bearish extension is possible if bearish sentiment continues to reign for the rest of this week.
Weekly Chart
The Weekly Chart is less optimistic about bearish prospects though, as prices are likely to find support from the 59.0 round figure which was the support floor of the consolidation zone seen during July 2013. Stochastic readings agree as the indicator is at the most Oversold levels in a year, favoring bullish movement from here. This may not necessarily invalidate the bearish momentum, but at the very least we could see some form of bullish pullback toward the aforementioned consolidation ceiling before a move toward the rising Channel Bottom can commence.
Fundamentally, nothing much has changed. India's inflation remains high while its economy continues to remain in the pits. The only difference right now is that market is more optimistic toward emerging markets, resulting in a broad strengthening of emerging market stocks and currency. On the other hand, the USD strengthening narrative has gotten stronger due to Fed Chairman Janet Yellen's hint of earlier than expected rate hikes. Given this, we should be expecting higher USD/INR instead of lower, and current bearish momentum may be hard to sustain in the long run.