Rupee @ 93 soon? The crude catalyst for rupee slump today, even as RBI sells dollars| Business News

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Rupee @ 93 soon? The crude catalyst for rupee slump today, even as RBI sells dollars| Business News


The rupee slipped past the 92/Dollar mark for the first time today, as a surge in crude oil prices—stoked by the blockade of Strait of Hormuz amid an escalating Iran war—sparked inflation fears in India’s “goldilocks” economy.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is likely selling dollars in the forex market to prevent any further slide in rupee.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is likely selling dollars in the forex market to prevent any further slide in rupee.

The local currency depreciated as much as 0.9%—its most severe intraday decline in 10 months—to hit 92.3050 against the dollar. The 10-year bond yield climbed five basis points to 6.73%, while the benchmark NSE Nifty 50 Index tumbled 2.3%.

The Reserve Bank of India moved swiftly to contain the market fallout. According to people familiar with the trading desk flows, RBI intervened by selling dollars to support the rupee shortly after it breached the 92-per-dollar level.

The Crude Catalyst for INR-USD

The core driver of the market turbulence stems from global energy markets.

Brent crude vaulted past $82 a barrel, fuelled by a 12% surge over two sessions—marking its steepest two-day advance since 2020. This aggressive price action vastly overshoots the $70 baseline RBI has modeled for the October–March period.

As India imports the vast majority of its energy requirements, sustained higher crude prices risk structurally widening the trade deficit and reigniting consumer inflation that had only recently showed signs of moderation.

“Higher crude oil prices is a direct risk to the rupee. We expect slightly heavier RBI intervention, but if oil prices remain high, we may have to tolerate a weaker rupee,” said Dhiraj Nim, a forex strategist at ANZ Banking Group Ltd. He said that his year-end target of 93/dollar could materialise much sooner given the current risk-off environment. Strategists at Maybank echoed this sentiment, citing 93 as the next major threshold to watch.

Iran war impact on rupee, bonds

India’s broader asset selloff mirrors a flight to safety across emerging markets in Asia. Regional equities suffered their sharpest collective drop in nearly a year, exacerbated by South Korea’s most dramatic market plunge since the 2008 global financial crisis. Most Asian currencies traded heavily in the red, with the Indian rupee leading the regional declines.

For policymakers, the parallel rise in bond yields complicates the RBI’s objective of anchoring domestic borrowing costs. While the central bank has signalled a pause in its repo-rate cycle, abundant liquidity in the banking sector had recently allowed overnight borrowing costs to drift below the benchmark policy rate.

“The bond market’s fear is the pass-through of the higher oil prices into the inflation numbers a few months down the line,” said Sagar Shah, head of domestic markets at RBL Bank Ltd. “This also complicates matters for the RBI and its liquidity management as the rupee tests new lows.”


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