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Markets

Indian rupee losing run seen extending on familiar headwinds: oil, demand‑supply mismatch

  • The rupee is expected to open in the 94.64-94.68 range, traders said, after settling at 94.54 on Tuesday
Published April 29, 2026 Updated April 29, 2026 08:02am
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters
By

MUMBAI: The Indian rupee is poised to add to its recent losses at Wednesday’s open, with the unrelenting rise in oil ​and a persistent demand‑supply mismatch in dollar flows keeping pressure on ‌the currency, bankers said.

The rupee is expected to open in the 94.64-94.68 range, traders said, after settling at 94.54 on Tuesday. The currency has dropped 1.74% over ​the past seven sessions, managing only one marginal advance.

During this slide, ​which has pushed the currency to within about 0.5% of ⁠its all‑time low of 95.21 hit in late March, traders have ​consistently pointed to heavy dollar demand from oil refiners and limited willingness by ​exporters to sell forward dollars in a challenging rupee environment.

The rupee’s outlook remains decidedly negative, with little sign that oil prices will pull back, as negotiations between the ​United States and Iran to halt the conflict have made no ​headway.

Oil prices were choppy on Wednesday amid reports that the United States would extend its ‌blockade ⁠of Iranian ports, a move likely to prolong supply disruptions from the key Middle East producing region. Brent crude was trading near $111 a barrel, having rallied more than 20% since April 20.

On a daily basis, there ​is a mismatch ​in flows, with ⁠dollar demand consistently outstripping supply and keeping the rupee under pressure, a currency trader at a private-sector bank ​said.

Oil‑related dollar demand, persistent equity outflows, speculative positioning skewed ​to long‑dollar ⁠bets, and a lack of exporter interest in selling dollars have together made it “difficult for the rupee to stabilise”, he added.

Market attention will meanwhile turn ⁠to the ​Federal Reserve’s April meeting later on Wednesday, ​the last to be chaired by Jerome Powell. It is almost certain that the Fed ​will keep the policy rate unchanged.

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