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Why is the rupee falling?

ANZ's Nitin Agarwal sees the rupee's move towards record lows to be a temporary phenomenon, if the Chinese yuan stabilises with INR expected to hover around 83.60-83.65 levels, assuming no further movement in global factors.

April 04, 2024 / 20:59 IST
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Yet another risk for the Indian currency is rising expectations that the US Fed may cut rates later and fewer times than anticipated earlier.

A strong US dollar and higher crude oil prices have pushed the Indian rupee to record lows in the past few weeks. Just about a fortnight ago, the rupee had hit an all-time low of 83.48.

On April 4, the rupee ended at 83.4375 against the US dollar, marginally weaker than its close of 83.4350 in the previous session, according to a Reuters report. The local unit fell to a record low of 83.4550 earlier in the session, likely prompting the Reserve Bank of India to intervene.

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This even at a time when India’s domestic macroeconomic fundamentals remains strong. Latest data shows, the country’s composite PMI output index rose to an eight-month high of 61.8 from 60.6 a month ago, aided by a 16-year high growth in manufacturing in March.