Introduction
Offshore currency derivative markets such as Non-Deliverable Forwards (NDFs) allow global investors to speculate on the rupee without operating in India’s regulated financial system. Their growth limits the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) control over the rupee’s exchange rate and complicates domestic monetary management.
Challenge to Monetary Policy Autonomy
• Price discovery shifting offshore: Large volumes in NDF markets weaken onshore price discovery, reducing RBI’s influence on the exchange rate.
• Higher volatility: Speculative offshore trades transmit volatility to onshore markets, complicating inflation targeting and liquidity management.
• Reduced policy effectiveness: Capital controls and domestic interventions become less effective when speculative positions move abroad.
RBI’s Regulatory Response
• Market liberalisation: Permitting banks in IFSC (GIFT City) to trade in rupee derivatives to bring activity onshore.
• Improved hedging access: Easing participation norms for corporates and foreign portfolio investors to deepen domestic derivative markets.
• Market monitoring: Enhanced surveillance of offshore–onshore linkages and macroprudential oversight.
• Rupee internationalisation steps: Measures such as INR settlement arrangements aim to reduce dependence on offshore mechanisms.
Broader Implications for Exchange Rate Management
• Need for deeper domestic markets: Greater liquidity and diverse participants reduce offshore dominance.
• Balancing stability with openness: India must balance capital account liberalisation with safeguarding financial stability.
• Policy credibility: Stable macro fundamentals—low inflation, fiscal discipline, and predictable regulation—remain crucial for reducing speculative pressures.
Conclusion
The rise of offshore derivative markets challenges India’s monetary autonomy, but calibrated liberalisation, stronger domestic financial markets, and credible macroeconomic policy can help the RBI maintain exchange rate stability while supporting gradual rupee internationalisation.