Greenland Tensions Ease, Boosting Rupee and Market Sentiment

The Indian rupee rebounded from its all-time low as signs of a de-escalation in Greenland-related geopolitical tensions provided relief to global market sentiment. According to a DBS Bank report, the recent bearishness was fueled by a spike in global volatility and rising bond yields. Domestically, the rupee faces pressure despite strong economic growth forecasts, with significant capital outflows from equity markets being a primary concern. The report notes that while the current account deficit remains manageable, the fiscal impulse and borrowing plans will be clearer in the upcoming Budget.

Key Points: Rupee Recovers as Greenland Tensions Show Signs of Easing

  • Rupee rebounds from record low
  • Global VIX spike fueled market weakness
  • EU trade deal likely next week
  • Capital flows remain a key concern
2 min read

Climbdown in Greenland tensions to boost market sentiments, help rupee recover

Rupee gains as Greenland tensions ease. DBS Bank report analyzes market relief, rupee volatility, and domestic economic pressures.

"overnight signs of a climbdown in Greenland-related tensions will provide relief to market sentiments - Radhika Rao, DBS Bank"

New Delhi, Jan 22

The overnight signs of a climbdown in Greenland-related tensions will provide relief to market sentiments and rupee volatility is likely to persist in the near term but depreciation is expected to be more gradual than the recent sharp moves, a report showed on Thursday.

The rupee rebounded from its all-time low levels to gain 15 paise at 91.50 against the US dollar in early trade on Thursday.

According to Radhika Rao, Executive Director and Senior Economist at DBS Bank, the bearish handover from last year was further fuelled by a confluence of global as well as domestic cues.

"A sharp rise in the global VIX reflected weakness across market indicators, not helped by unfavourable geopolitical developments and jump in global bond yields. In this context, overnight signs of a climbdown in Greenland-related tensions will provide relief to market sentiments," she noted.

A momentous trade deal with the European Union is within reach (likely to be finalised next week), and some optimism has resurfaced over the US-trade trade negotiations after constructive remarks out of the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting Davos.

Domestically, the downward pressure on the rupee comes at a time of apparent strength in economic growth, with the 1Q-2QFY average at 8 per cent (on-year) and "our forecast at above 7.5 per cent for FY26".

A weak currency does cushion rupee earnings for exporters affected by higher tariffs but has caused distortions elsewhere.

"The annual CAD will still look manageable at close to -1.0-1.2 per cent of GDP, but capital flows have been the bigger bother. After net outflows in 2025, equity markets have witnessed $3 billion outflows this year, while bonds attracted tepid interest," said the DBS Bank report.

Net FDI is faring better than last year but is still at a gap compared to gross FDI due to repatriation pressures.

"The fiscal impulse will be more apparent at the upcoming Budget, as cumulative general government borrowings are expected to rise in FY27," it mentioned.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
While the short-term relief is welcome, the structural issues remain. The report itself mentions capital outflows and tepid bond interest. The Budget needs to address investor confidence, not just rely on external geopolitical factors. Fiscal discipline is key.
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Aman W
Finally some good news! My father's small manufacturing unit exports handicrafts. The rupee depreciation had some benefit, but the uncertainty was killing. A stable rupee around 91-92 is much better than wild swings. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
Interesting analysis. As someone working in the fintech sector here, global VIX and bond yields have a huge ripple effect on our funding and valuations. Hope the Davos optimism translates into real FDI flows and not just repatriation.
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Vikram M
The 8% growth figure is impressive, but does the common man feel it? Petrol prices are still high, inflation pinches. A strong economy should mean a strong rupee in the long run. Let's see what the Budget brings.
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Kriti O
Geopolitical tensions in far-off places affecting our currency and markets... shows how interconnected the world is now. We need to build more domestic resilience. At least the CAD is under control, that's a silver lining.

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