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Markets

Risk aversion compounding oil-driven pressure on Indian rupee, RBI in focus

  • The Indian rupee is expected to open in the 96.40-96.44 range ‌to the US dollar, per traders, having settled at 96.3450 on Thursday
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MUMBAI: The Indian rupee is likely to extend its decline at Friday’s open, with a deteriorating risk appetite adding to headwinds from rising crude ​oil prices.

The Indian rupee is expected to open in the 96.40-96.44 range ‌to the US dollar, per traders, having settled at 96.3450 on Thursday.

The currency is on a four-session losing streak, during which it has slipped past levels that many market participants had ​expected to provide significant resistance.

The currency now sits less than 0.5% ​away from its record low of 96.96 per US dollar, hit ⁠in May.

While the Reserve Bank of India has been intervening almost daily in ​both the spot and non-deliverable forward markets to support the currency, traders said the ​scale of intervention has been relatively measured considering the intensity of the pressure on the rupee.

The currency has come under pressure despite a turnaround in portfolio flows, particularly on the equity ​side. Foreign investors have purchased about $1.5 billion worth of Indian equities so far ​this month, marking a major reversal from the more than $5 billion of outflows recorded in June.

Foreign ‌flows ⁠into debt have also remained positive, with overseas investors investing roughly $500 million so far this month, adding to the more than $3 billion that flowed into Indian debt in June.

“You have to think it is the usual importer demand and exporter-related flows” ​that are weighing on ​the rupee, a ⁠currency trader at a bank said.

There have been a few “chunky” outflows too, and the RBI has not shown intent to ​defend a particular level aggressively, he added.

Risk aversion, oil

Asian equities ​fell and ⁠U.S. equity futures extended losses, while Brent crude hovered near $85 a barrel after rallying about 12% this week due to escalating hostilities in the Middle East.

The United States ⁠and Iran ​have stepped up attacks across the Gulf region, ​with the collapse of their ceasefire raising concerns about disruptions to oil flows through the Strait of ​Hormuz, a critical artery for crude supplies.


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