By Subhadip Sircar
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The rupee resumed its descent on Wednesday to move within sight of a record low hit a day earlier, with policymakers set to discuss fresh measures to defend the worst performing Asian currency of the year so far.
Financial sector regulators, including Raghuram Rajan, who was on Tuesday appointed to take over next month as governor of the Reserve Bank of India, were due to meet in Mumbai amid speculation that the government will soon announce steps to spur capital inflows.
The Economic Times reported on Wednesday that New Delhi was likely to relax borrowing rules for debt-laden Indian companies including doubling the amount a firm can borrow overseas to $1.5 billion.
"Everyone is expecting the government and RBI to announce some steps. How long will they help the rupee depends on what steps they take," said Anjali Verma, economist at PhillipCapital in Mumbai.
New Delhi has considered a sovereign bond issue or a NRI bond sale by state-run firms, although a sovereign issue has been opposed by the central bank.
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Policymakers have sought to avoid raising the policy repo rate, which would likely force up bank lending rates, for fear of exacerbating a slowdown in an economy that grew 5 percent in the last fiscal year - its slowest rate in a decade.
"A strong move like a repo hike or a NRI bond sale may have a substantial positive impact," Verma said.
The central bank's costly gamble last month to raise short-term interest rates and drain market liquidity in order to defend the rupee at the cost of crimping corporate credit is not paying off, with the currency down 2.5 percent since before the measures were unveiled on July 15.
It fell to a record low of 61.80 to the dollar on Tuesday before recovering on RBI buying late in the day that took it back to 60.77/78 by the close. At 3:48 p.m. on Wednesday, the rupee was trading at 60.94/95 versus the dollar.
Bonds posted modest gains with the benchmark 10-year yield down 1 basis point at 8.19 percent.
The Congress-led government, facing a hostile opposition in the monsoon session of parliament that started this week, has been promising more steps to boost fund inflows, including a possible overseas bond sale by state-run firms.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's appointment on Tuesday of Rajan, the top adviser in the finance ministry and a former top International Monetary Fund chief economist, to head the central bank was seen helping the country's battered image among investors.
"We think Dr. Rajan's appointment will give the government breathing space to come up with a more credible road map to address currency weakness and outflows," Barclays economists wrote in a note.
"In our view, to restore market confidence, the authorities need to change the strategy and admit to the seriousness of imbalances in the economy and come up with a strong package of measures addressing both short-term flows and the need to stimulate growth and reduce the current account deficit."
(Editing by Tony Munroe and Simon Cameron-Moore)