India’s central bank is likely selling US dollars to stabilize the rupee, which has tumbled past the 92-per-dollar mark amid surging crude oil prices and escalating geopolitical tensions in West Asia. The intervention aims to curb volatility, protect inflation targets, and reassure jittery financial markets.
The rupee’s sharp depreciation this week has rattled investors, with the currency sliding to a record low of 92.41 against the dollar. Rising oil prices, driven by conflict in West Asia, have intensified dollar demand, prompting the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to step in through state-run banks to temper the fall.
Currency Market Intervention
Traders report that the RBI sold dollars aggressively in pre-market sessions, helping the rupee recover slightly from its lows. The move underscores the central bank’s commitment to maintaining stability in the foreign exchange market, especially as oil imports threaten to widen India’s trade deficit.
Economic Impact
A weaker rupee raises import costs, particularly for crude oil, which fuels inflationary pressures across sectors. Analysts warn that if oil prices remain elevated, the rupee could face further downside risks, potentially testing 93–94 levels in the near term. Exporters may benefit marginally, but overall macroeconomic stability remains at stake.
Key Highlights
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Rupee hits record low of 92.41 against US dollar
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RBI intervenes by selling dollars via state-run banks
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Oil surge and West Asia conflict drive currency weakness
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Inflation and trade deficit risks intensify for India
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Analysts caution rupee may slide further if oil prices stay high
Sources: Forbes India, Mint, Domain-b.com, Bloomberg, InsightsIAS