There seems to be too much pessimism in the air. While the risks - currency depreciation, falling dollar reserves, rising inflation and uncomfortably high twin deficits - are all well known, it is possibly time to ask when could the tide turn. And turn it will, analysts believe, once policy makers start showing a modicum of panic that the market is showing. After a 20 per cent fall in the currency, it is fair to assume that the overshooting will stop at some point, when the depreciation is overdone. Once that happens, the equity markets could start responding positively.
Analysis of historical data suggests that once the currency stops depreciating, the equity markets not only start stabilising but also start moving upwards. There are three episodes in India's currency history that resembles the current crisis when the rupee fell by over 20 per cent. The first instance was between July 1995 and February 1996, when the rupee fell by 20.6 per cent. During the 199 days of depreciation, markets fell by 4.5 per cent. The second was between March 2008 to March 2009, during which the currency fell 28.6 per cent and equities fell by 46.5 per cent during this period. The third episode of currency fall is more recent, when the rupee fell by 19.3 per cent between March 2011 and December 2011. The stock indices fell by 13.3 per cent during this period.