India stronger now, Fed taper has had a moderate impact: RBI paper
Vidya Kamate and Saurabh Ghosh from the RBI's strategic research unit analysed India's benchmark bond's movement after the two taper announcements by the Fed in May 2013 and November 2021 and found that the impact on the 10-year government bond yi...

Vidya Kamate and Saurabh Ghosh from the RBI's strategic research unit analysed India's benchmark bond's movement after the two taper announcements by the Fed in May 2013 and November 2021 and found that the impact on the 10-year government bond yields was moderate (5.46 basis points) in the latest event as compared to May 2013 (11.32 basis points).

Stronger Indian economic fundamentals currently could also be another potential explanation for the resilience in the Indian markets post Taper 2, the researchers said.
“A lower current account deficit as a percentage of GDP, larger foreign exchange reserves and stronger economic growth in Taper 2 vis-à-vis Taper 1 period imply that the Indian economy is in a much better shape to withstand Fed tightening and manage any associated change in volatility in financial markets,” the paper said.
The Indian bond market reacted strongly to the Taper 1 announcement with the yield curve (10-year minus 2-year) inverting in the months following the May 2013 announcement with 10-year yield falling by 19 basis points and the spread by 21 basis points. A yield curve inversion is usually treated as a precursor to recession. In comparison, Taper 2 announcement has had an insignificant impact on Indian bond yields.
In contrast, the rupee experienced a mild depreciation following Taper 2 that was quickly corrected in the following weeks. FPI outflows have been moderate and mostly in the form of equity in the immediate aftermath of Taper 2.
Though the Indian financial markets have been only mildly impacted by Taper 2, there are evidences of large volatility spill-overs from the US to Indian equity and bond markets. “This emphasises the need for readiness among EMEs in terms of adequate buffers, pre-emptive and calibrated state contingent and data-dependent policy responses to withstand future volatility spill-overs,” the paper said.
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