India’s foreign exchange reserves rise to $578 billion, highest in over eight months
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India’s foreign exchange reserves rise to $578 billion, highest in over eight months

India's forex reserves rose for a second week, increasing by $5.98 billion & stood at its highest since early July, according to RBI's statistical supplement. The rupee ended at 82.16 Friday.

   
Representative image of Indian rupee | Reuters

Representative image of Indian rupee | Reuters

Mumbai: India’s foreign exchange reserves rose for a second straight week and stood at $578.78 billion, highest since early July, as of the week ended March 24, the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) statistical supplement showed on Friday.

That is an increase of $5.98 billion from the previous week.

The central bank intervenes in the spot and forwards market to prevent runaway moves in the rupee’s exchange rate against the dollar. Changes in the forex reserves also stem from valuation gains or losses.

In the week ended March 24, the rupee was marginally higher against the dollar, trading in the 82.0700 to 82.7050 range.

The rupee ended at 82.1650 on Friday and logged its biggest weekly rise in nearly a month. The Indian unit fell 7.8% against the greenback in 2022-23. [INR/]

 

(Reporting by Siddhi Nayak; Editing by Janane Venkatraman)

Disclaimer: This report is auto generated from the Reuters news service. ThePrint holds no responsibilty for its content.


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