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Analysis Featured News Stocks

Rupee logs biggest slide in two years on dollar’s surge, limited central bank presence

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The Indian rupee slumped to a fresh all time-low and logged its biggest single-day decline in nearly two years on Monday, bogged down by a surging U.S. dollar, likely outflows from local equities and limited intervention from the central bank.

The rupee declined to 86.5825 before ending the session at 86.5750, down 0.7% on the day. The last time it fell this much was in February 2023.

The local currency has declined over 2% since December on worries over India’s slowing growth and expectations that central bank may cut rates as soon as February.

“The rupee’s slide can continue for some time as negative factors have stacked up quite a bit unless the central bank announces some measures,” said Anshul Chandak, head of treasury at RBL Bank.

Chandak reckons the 87 handle is “just around the corner,” for the rupee and expects the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to use its diminished reserves “cautiously.”

India’s foreign exchange reserves dropped to $634.6 billion in the week through Jan. 3, an over 10-month low, and down $70 billion from a peak hit in late September.

The country’s FX reserves saw the biggest drawdown in percentage terms in Asia in December, as per Nomura’s calculations.

The RBI has been intervening to slow down the rupee’s decline, selling dollars in the spot and the forward market.

The RBI sold dollars on Monday, but less aggressively than previous episodes of sharp rupee weakness, traders said.

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