Need Tally
for Clients?

Contact Us! Here

  Tally Auditor

License (Renewal)
  Tally Gold

License Renewal

  Tally Silver

License Renewal
  Tally Silver

New Licence
  Tally Gold

New Licence
 
Open DEMAT Account with in 24 Hrs and start investing now!
« Direct Tax »
Open DEMAT Account in 24 hrs
 Net direct tax collection grow 7% as refunds fall sharply
 GSTR-3B deadline expired: File now to avoid input tax credit loss, GST registration cancellation
 ITR Filing: Income tax department shortens time limit for condonation of delay What it means for taxpayers
 CBDT launches campaign to intimate taxpayers on undeclared foreign assets in ITR
 ITR AY2024-25: CBDT launches campaign for taxpayers to report income from foreign sources
  CBDT comes out with FAQs on Direct Tax Vivad se Viswas scheme 2024
 CBDT weighs overhaul of designations for income tax officials to secure better clarity
 Direct tax-GDP ratio at millennial high in FY24
 CBDT comes out with FAQs on Direct Tax Vivad se Viswas scheme 2024
 Tax filing: How to choose the right ITR form
 Income Tax Return: How to maximise your tax refunds while filing ITR?

RBI Working Paper No. 4/2021: Does Offshore NDF Market Influence Onshore Forex Market? Evidence from India
August, 12th 2021

The Reserve Bank of India today placed on its website a Working Paper titled “Does Offshore NDF Market Influence Onshore Forex Market? Evidence from India” under the Reserve Bank of India Working Paper Series*. The paper is authored by Harendra Behera, Rajiv Ranjan and Sajjid Chinoy.

The paper studies the relationship between onshore and offshore markets for the Indian rupee and finds a stable long-run relationship between them. Price discovery usually takes place in onshore market, i.e., spot and forward segments, before the information transmits to NDF market in the long-run. In the post-taper tantrum period, the direction of causality has reversed, and the onshore market mostly derives information from offshore to form price quotation domestically.

Regarding “volatility spillover”, the analysis suggests that the spillover between onshore and offshore forex markets is bidirectional during normal periods, but turns unidirectional from offshore to onshore during episodes of intensified global risks. Moreover, the magnitude of volatility spillovers from offshore to onshore markets also rises during periods of stress. Hence, the study recommends a real-time monitoring of the forex markets to contain any substantial spillover from the offshore to onshore markets.

(Yogesh Dayal)     
Chief General Manager

Press Release: 2021-2022/674


* The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) introduced the RBI Working Papers series in March 2011. These papers present research in progress of the staff members of the RBI and at times also those of external co-authors, when the research is jointly undertaken. They are disseminated to elicit comments and further debate. The views expressed in these papers are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the institution(s) to which they belong. Comments and observations may please be forwarded to the authors. Citation and use of such papers should take into account its provisional character.

Home | About Us | Terms and Conditions | Contact Us
Copyright 2026 CAinINDIA All Right Reserved.
Designed and Developed by Ritz Consulting