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- India’s US Treasury holdings fall 26% from 2023 peak to
$174 billion
- Treasuries’ share of India’s reserves drops to about
one-third
- RBI diversifies into gold and alternatives while
defending the rupee
- Sanctions and tariff risks push central banks to reduce
dollar exposure
- China and Brazil cut Treasuries as global gold buying
accelerates
- Trade deal with the US could slow sales but rebound
unlikely
- Survey shows nearly 60% of central banks exploring
alternatives
- Strategists expect stabilization in India’s holdings
rather than a surge
India has reduced its holdings of long-term US Treasuries to $174
billion, a five-year low and 26% below the 2023 peak, as policymakers defend
the rupee and diversify the nation’s reserves.
The shift has lowered Treasuries’ share of India’s
foreign-exchange assets to roughly one-third, down from about 40% a year
earlier, Reserve Bank of India data indicates.
The rebalancing includes greater allocations to gold and other
alternatives, echoing moves by larger reserve holders such as China and Brazil.
Analysts say the recalibration reflects both market and
geopolitical considerations, and there is little doubt that the news will
strike an ominous chord with those who harbour concerns over the impact on the
U.S. economy of President Donald Trump’s expansionist and tariff policies.
Win Thin, chief economist at Bank of Nassau 1982 Ltd., said India
still has “room to lighten up” on Treasuries as some central banks reduce
exposure to dollar-denominated assets to limit sanctions risk.
RBI officials did not comment on the decline, while Finance
Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in September that reserve diversification is a
“very considered decision.”
The approach gained urgency after the US froze Russia’s reserves
in 2022, a precedent that sharpened focus on financial vulnerabilities for
countries with large dollar assets.
Tensions between Washington and New Delhi have added pressure.
India’s continued purchases of Russian oil and the imposition of US tariffs
reportedly as high as 50% on Indian exports have complicated trade talks.
Delays to a new pact have coincided with record lows for the
rupee, prompting RBI intervention financed in part by Treasury sales to support
the currency.
Broader doubts about the durability of US assets as the default
reserve choice have also grown amid global tariff proposals and the expanding
use of sanctions.
India’s holdings remain modest next to Japan’s roughly $1.2
trillion and China’s near $683 billion, but its selling feeds a larger debate
about the role of US sovereign bonds in diversified portfolios.
Gold buying has accelerated. China and Brazil recently trimmed
long-term Treasury exposure to the lowest since at least 2011 while adding
bullion, and Poland approved purchases of another 150 tons this week.
Central banks are navigating a more complex reserve landscape in
which the dollar still dominates but alternative assets are gaining traction.
There are potential brakes on India’s divestment. A steadier rupee
would lessen the need for currency defense, and a finalized US-India trade deal
could further reduce pressure on reserves.
“If the trade deal materializes, the need for aggressive currency
defense could diminish,” said Krishna Bhimavarapu, Asia Pacific economist at
State Street Investment Management.
Even so, many expect only stabilization, not a reversal. An OMFIF
survey in November found most central banks still hold the dollar but nearly
60% plan to seek alternatives within two years.
“The trend is very much embedded at this point,” said Michael
Brown, senior research strategist at Pepperstone. Any trade breakthrough, he
added, is more likely to stop further cuts than to trigger “a mass buying
spree.”