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Monday, June 15, 2026
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HomeIndiaRupee set for strong opening as US-Iran peace deal lower oil prices

Rupee set for strong opening as US-Iran peace deal lower oil prices

The peace deal has raised expectations of cheaper crude, improved capital flows and a stronger rupee after months of pressure from the West Asia conflict.

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Mumbai: The Indian rupee is likely to strengthen at Monday’s open after a U.S.-Iran peace deal knocked oil prices lower and spurred hopes that dollar inflows will return to Asia’s third-largest economy.

The rupee is expected to open in the 94.80-94.85 per dollar range, per traders, having settled at 95.11 on Friday. The rupee is set to surpass the highs it reached after the Reserve Bank of India’s policy announcement on June 5, which laid out a raft of measures to support the currency.

Asian equities and currencies advanced, while the dollar index and U.S. Treasury yields fell and oil prices tumbled after U.S. President Donald Trump and Iran’s deputy foreign minister said they had reached a deal to end the war and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Brent crude dived 4.5% to $83.40, the lowest level in more than three months.

The critical question for markets is the durability of the peace deal and, by extension, the sustainability of the drop in oil prices, a currency trader at a bank said. If crude remains anchored near $80, the pressure created by equity outflows is likely to moderate, reinforcing expectations that portfolio flows could return, the trader added.

The more than three-month war between the United States and Iran has cast a long shadow over the rupee, weighing on foreign appetite for Indian assets, inflating the country’s import bill and dimming the growth outlook.

Amid persistent pressure on the rupee, the RBI announced a raft of measures at its recent policy meeting to bring in dollar inflows, including the revival of a 2013-type window to mobilise funds from non-resident Indians. The RBI’s measures had already begun to build momentum behind the rupee, and the drop in oil prices could provide the complementary support needed, the currency trader said.

This report is auto-generated from Reuters news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

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