RBI Forex Exposure Cap (Completely Explained)

RBI Forex Exposure Cap
Important questions for UPSC Pre/ Mains/ Interview:

  1. What is the RBI’s forex exposure cap?
  2. Why did RBI introduce this cap?
  3. How does the forex cap work? (Mechanism)
  4. What is the current status of India’s forex reserves and rupee?
  5. What role do FPIs play in rupee depreciation?
  6. Why are banks concerned about the forex cap?
  7. What are the broader implications of this move?
  8. What are the benefits and concerns of the policy?
  9. What safeguards and additional measures can RBI use?

Context

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has directed banks to cap their foreign currency exposure at $100 million per day to stabilise the sharply depreciating rupee amid rising crude oil prices and global uncertainties due to the West Asia conflict. Despite the move, the rupee has weakened further, highlighting pressures on India’s external sector and forex reserves.

Q1. What is the RBI’s forex exposure cap?

  1. RBI has limited banks’ Net Open Position (NOP) in foreign currency to $100 million per day
  2. Earlier limit: Up to 25% of bank capital
  3. Objective: Reduce speculative currency positions and stabilise rupee volatility
  4. Timeline: Banks must comply by April 10
  5. Nature: Regulatory tightening (not direct intervention)

Q2. Why did RBI introduce this cap?

  1. Problem
    1. Sharp depreciation of rupee: Fell to around ₹94.8 per dollar
    2. Rising crude oil prices: Above $100/barrel
    3. External pressures: West Asia conflict and iInflation concerns
  2. Need
    1. Protect: Forex reserves and currency stability
    2. Prevent: Excessive speculation by banks

Q3. How does the forex cap work? (Mechanism)

  1. Banks must reduce large foreign currency positions.
  2. Process: Sell excess dollar holdings
  3. Expected impact: Increase dollar supply in market and support rupee value.
  4. Policy shift from Direct intervention (selling reserves) to Regulatory control (limiting exposure)

Q4. What is the current status of India’s forex reserves and rupee?

  1. Forex reserves fell by $30+ billion and now are around $698 billion.
  2. Rupee trend: Depreciated ~4% since conflict and breached ₹92 → ₹93 → ₹94 levels.
  3. Key drivers: Oil imports and capital outflows.

Q5. What role do FPIs play in rupee depreciation?

  1. Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs): Net sellers throughout March
  2. Reasons: Weak global markets, falling rupee, high oil prices and growth concerns
  3. Impact: Capital outflows, increased demand for dollars and downward pressure on rupee.

Q6. Why are banks concerned about the forex cap?

  1. Operational Concerns
    1. Short implementation timeline
    2. Need for gradual transition (3 months requested)
  2. Financial Risks
    1. Forced unwinding of $11–15 billion positions
    2. Risk: Mark-to-market losses
    3. Impact: Reduced treasury profits
  3. Market Impact
    1. Reduced arbitrage opportunities
    2. Possible shift to offshore markets
    3. Risk of increased speculation abroad and higher volatility

Q7. What are the broader implications of this move?

  1. Administrative / Regulatory
    1. Stronger control over banking sector forex exposure
    2. Signals RBI’s proactive stance
  2. Economic
    1. Reflects external sector vulnerability
    2. Risks: Inflation due to weak rupee
  3. Financial Stability
    1. Protects forex reserves
    2. Reduces speculative pressure
  4. Global Linkages: Sensitive to oil prices and geopolitical conflicts

Q8. What are the benefits and concerns of the policy?

Benefits Concerns
  1. Stabilises rupee in short term
  2. Preserves forex reserves
  3. Limits speculative currency trading
  4. Enhances regulatory control
  1. Limited immediate impact on rupee
  2. Financial losses for banks
  3. Shift of trading to offshore markets
  4. May not address structural causes

Q9. What safeguards and additional measures can RBI use?

Past Lessons: During crises (e.g., Global Financial Crisis, Taper Tantrum), RBI used:

  1. FCNR(B) inflows (>$30 billion)
  2. Repo rate hikes
  3. Import restrictions (e.g., gold)
Short-term Tools Medium-term Measures Long-term Strategy
  1. Dollar swap windows
  2. Liquidity management
  3. Targeted interventions

 

  1. Attract capital inflows: FPI reforms and ECB relaxation.
  2. Encourage NRI deposits: FCNR(B) accounts
  1. Reduce import dependence (especially oil)
  2. Strengthen export competitiveness

Conclusion

The RBI’s forex exposure cap reflects a strategic shift toward regulatory intervention to stabilise the rupee amid external shocks. While it may offer short-term relief, sustained stability will depend on managing capital flows, controlling inflation, and strengthening India’s external sector fundamentals.