Sri Lankan rupee steadies

08 Mar, 2017

The Sri Lankan rupee ended steady in thin trade on Tuesday as mild importer dollar demand offset sales of the greenback by exporters while traders awaited cues on foreign selling in bonds, dealers said. Rupee forwards were active, with two-week forwards ending at 151.85/95 per dollar, unchanged from Monday's close.
"There was no big demand. Everybody is on the watch. They are waiting to see the direction, whether there'll be more bond sales by foreigners," said a currency dealer on condition of anonymity.
"I don't know if this is a calm before the storm."
Foreign investors bought a net 701 million rupees ($4.64 million) worth of government securities in the week ended March 1, recording the first weekly net inflow for the year. They have sold a net 63.76 billion rupees of such instruments so far this year.
The rupee has weakened 1.07 percent so far this year. It fell 3.9 percent last year, following a 10 percent drop in 2015. The International Monetary Find, during the latter part of the trading session, urged the central bank to allow flexible exchange rates and stand ready to tighten monetary policy after the island nation missed the net international reserves target in it $1.5 billion loan programme.
Dealers said the rupee would be under pressure due to dollar demand from importers ahead of the traditional Sinhala-Tamil New Year in mid-April, and as foreign investors continue to sell government securities.
Ratings agency Moody's said in a report last week that lower agricultural exports and higher imports to make up for the loss in domestic production would weigh on the current account deficit and foreign exchange reserves.

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