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Sri Lankan rupee forwards ended firmer on Thursday, gaining for a third straight day on dollar sales amid expectation that the unit would rise further due to expected inflows, while the spot currency traded steady as a state-run bank sold the greenback, dealers said. One-week forwards, which were actively traded, ended at 134.10/20 per dollar, compared with Wednesday's close of 134.20/30.
Three-month forwards, which have been actively traded over the last few weeks in the absence of spot, ended steady at 135.70/136.00 per dollar. The spot rupee was steady at 133.90 per dollar as a state-run bank, through which the central bank usually directs the market, sold dollars at 133.90 for a third straight day, dealers said. "The pressure eased as a state-run bank sold dollars. The market expects the rupee to appreciate in the short run," a currency dealer said asking not to be named.
On Monday, the spot currency started trading after nearly six months after the island nation raised nearly $1 billion from bond sales last week. Sri Lanka raised $650 million last Thursday through an international sovereign bond sale and $388 million from development bonds. Dealers said exporters may start selling dollars as inflows from the dollar bond sale would help boost the rupee.
The central bank has imposed a 5 percent penalty on exporters who hold dollars for more than 90 days, and a 2 percent monthly penalty thereafter, currency dealers said. Exporters have been reluctant to convert dollars into the local currency as it is cheaper to manage costs with rupee loans in a lower interest rate environment.

Copyright Reuters, 2015

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