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HomeEconomyRBI back to defending rupee after October gains fizzle

RBI back to defending rupee after October gains fizzle

Uncertainty over tariffs on India’s exports to the US and a less certain path for Federal Reserve rate cuts are exerting pressure on the rupee, which fell for a third straight session on Monday to 88.7988 against the dollar.

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The Indian rupee is inching closer to a new low again, with the central bank’s recent interventions providing only a limited respite for Asia’s worst-performing currency this year.

Uncertainty over tariffs on India’s exports to the US and a less certain path for Federal Reserve rate cuts are exerting pressure on the rupee, which fell for a third straight session on Monday to 88.7988 against the dollar. The currency has failed to hold on to its gains after the Reserve Bank of India unexpectedly sold large amounts of dollars last month to quell speculation against the rupee.

The monetary authority has been selling small amounts of dollars over the past few days, keeping the rupee from breaking past its record low of 88.8050 per dollar, traders familiar with the transactions said, asking not to be identified as they aren’t authorized to speak publicly. The intervention is relatively smaller in nature compared with the large dollar sales seen last month, they said.

Irrespective of RBI’s intervention, the rupee is facing more depreciation pressure, said Sakshi Gupta, senior economist at HDFC Bank Ltd. “The short dollar story has kind of run its course.”

The rupee managed to hold steady in October after five successive months of losses, largely due to the RBI’s hand. The currency is down about 3.6% this year, against a gain of more than 3% in most other emerging Asian peers.

READ: Indian Central Bank Boosts Dollar Shorts to Rein in Rupee Slide

The RBI doesn’t target any level or price band for the rupee, RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra said recently.

“The RBI may not let the 89 level break significantly unless there are other economic fundamentals that start working against India and the rupee,” said Dhiraj Nim, currency strategist at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group.

(Reporting by Bhaskar Dutta and Subhadip Sircar. With assistance from Anup Roy.)

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


Also Read: Bangladesh’s economic crisis is a cautionary tale. For India too


 

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