Mumbai Investment:Can India Sufficiently Internationalize Its Rupee For Oil Payments?

Can India Sufficiently Internationalize Its Rupee For Oil Payments?

India is the world’s third-largest consumer of crude oil and remains reliant on imports to service over 85% of its needs. That leaves the burgeoning economy at the mercy of painful foreign exchange conversions to the U.S. dollar – the default currency of the international commodities market.

Cognizant of this, in 2022 the country’s government and Prime Minister Narendra Modi set about its mission to internationalize the Indian rupee. As a first step, on July 11, 2022, India’s central bank – the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) – allowed importers to pay with and exporters be paid in rupees.

The Modi administration also courted major international partners to open rupee vostro bank accounts, a mechanism for domestic banks to act as custodians of foreign counterparts for facilitating forex settlements. Around 22 countries duly obliged within a year of the move including a few oil producers, according to information provided by RBI.

They included Bangladesh, Belarus, Botswana, Fiji, Germany, Guyana, Israel, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Malaysia, Maldives, Mauritius, Myanmar, New Zealand, Oman, Russia, Seychelles, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Uganda, and the U.K.

However, the plan has stuttered since it was conceived primarily with the burden of crude oil payments in mind. In December, that India found no takers for rupee payments for oil from July 2022 to June 2023Mumbai Investment. But a month later, in July 2023, the country finally made its purchased from the United Arab Emirates (U.A.E), the newswire added.

India’s Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas said the deal involved a payment in rupees by the Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) for the purchase of 1 million barrels of oil from the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC).

A few other deals, primarily for Russian oil, do appear to have taken place since. But there has not been much more of a shiftBangalore Stock Exchange. India has offered no specific targets or advised timelines in its bid to internationalize the rupee. Market evidence suggests it may not be easy in any case.

The rupee is currently trading at its lowest against the dollar in over a decade, and appears stuck within a very narrow range of INR 82.50 to 83.50 to one greenbackVaranasi Investment. Therefore, it makes little sense for many of India’s international trading partners to hoard its currency given its lack of relative strength.

Geopolitical discord also seems to have reared its head. For instance, having discovered a penchant for discounted and – the rupee should have been an easy sell to Moscow.Udabur Wealth Management

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But the Russians aren’t too keen on the currency either given the bilateral trade balance between both countries leans more towards Moscow than Delhi. Instead, they appear keener to accept payments in China’s yuan in lieu of the dollar.

That’s something India’s privately-held refiners are doing alreadyBangalore Investment. But the Modi administration, while not explicitly forbidding it, certainly frowns on it seeing China as a regional and geopolitical rival, and domestic media reports.

Sources suggest Delhi’s suggestion of making some payments to the Russian in U.A.E. dirhams, instead of the yuan, if not the rupee, are also running into trouble. Complications associated with repatriating funds from the Emirates in the wake of a fresh wave of U.S. sanctions on Russia are seemingly blocking that avenue.

The kerfuffle has likely led to a decline in Russian oil exports to India, currently lurking at an 11-month low of 1.5 million bpd. That’s down from 1.95 million bpd in early 2023 (or nearly 40% of Indian oil imports).

However, that’s been denied by India’s energy minister Hardeep Singh Puri who recently said the decline in Russian imports was down

Of course, less Russian oil means more from others including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, U.S. and the U.A.E, nearly all of whom – with the exception of the Emiratis – do not appear willing to except anything other than dollars to service India’s needs.

Those needs are rising. At the India Energy Week conference in February, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said India is projected to record an oil demand increase of almost 1.2 million barrels per day (bpd) .

That accounts for over one-third of the projected 3.2 million bpd of global increases in the period. No matter what happens from hereon, and whom India buys oil from, bulk of those purchases will likely be paid for in dollars.

For context, India should perhaps look at its arch rival China, and a bigger importer of many commodities including oil. After over a decade of market chatter about China’s efforts to prop up the yuan, stood at just over 2% of global forex reserves at the end of Q3 2023, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) versus the dollar’s at 59%.

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