HomeNewsBusinessOil, gold importers' demand for dollar drags rupee to record low of 88.44 vs USD

Oil, gold importers' demand for dollar drags rupee to record low of 88.44 vs USD

Indian rupee has been under pressure since the imposition of the tariffs by the US President Donald Trump. The currency further depreciated after the tariffs were increased to 50 percent.

September 11, 2025 / 16:19 IST
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Indian Rupee
Indian Rupee

Indian rupee ended record low on September 11 driven by strong demand for dollars from oil and gold importers for hedging purpose, tariff-related uncertainty, and consistent selling by foreign investors in Indian equites, currency experts said.

Experts added that there were no signs of intervention by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in the spot market as it allowed the domestic currency to trade with market flows.

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The local currency ended at 88.44 against the US dollar, as compared to 88.1288 at open and 88.1013 at previous close against the greenback. During the afternoon trade rupee touched a record low of 88.4563 against the US dollar.

“There were buying of dollars from the oil and gold importers from the banks,” said Dilip Parmar, a foreign exchange analyst at HDFC Securities.