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Showing posts with label rupee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rupee. Show all posts

Rupee continues slide for 5th day, falls 47 paise against dollar

Rupee continues slide for 5th day against US dollar
The Indian rupee continued to slide against the US dollar for the fifth day in a row, closing down at a fresh two-month low,  amid bearish local equities and demand for the US currency from importers.

A firm dollar overseas also weighed on the rupee as the dollar index, consisting of six major global rivals, was up by 0.28 per cent.

At the Interbank Foreign Exchange Market, the domestic currency resumed lower at 63.35 and moved in a range of 63.30 to 63.84 against the dollar before settling at 63.71, a fall of 47 paise or 0.74 per cent.

The rupee has plunged 209 paise, or 3.39 per cent, in five straight sessions. It is at the lowest level since closing at 63.84 on September 10.

"Rupee was seen depreciating against the US dollar due to persistent dollar strength, rising dollar demand from the domestic oil companies and debt market outflows. Also, the stock markets which ended the session on a negative note contributed to the weakness in the local currency," said Abhishek Goenka, CEO of India Forex Advisors.

The 30-share BSE Sensex tumbled 209.05 points, or 1.02 per cent, to a one-month low, completing six days of losses. Overseas investors pumped in Rs 333.50 crore in stocks on Monday.

Rupee falls further on strong dollar demand

 Rupee falls further on strong dollar demand
Continuing its slide for the sixth straight day, the rupee on Wednesday lost 17 paise to trade at a fresh two-month low of 63.88 in early trade on strong dollar demand from importers amid weak local equities.

At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the local currency opened lower at 63.88 a dollar from its previous close of 63.71.

Forex dealers said besides sustained demand for the US currency from importers and a lower opening in the domestic equity market also put pressure on the rupee but dollar's weakness against euro in the global markets capped the fall.

The rupee had depreciated by 47 paise to close at 63.71 against the dollar in the previous session. Meanwhile, the BSE benchmark Sensex fell by 53.97 points, or 0.27 per cent, to 20,227.94 in early trade on Wednesday.

Indian rupee drops 83 paise against US dollar, breaches 63-mark

Rupee breaches 63-mark in early trade

he Indian rupee dropped by 83 paise to 63.30 against the US dollar after a gap of nearly eight weeks on persistent dollar demand from importers and banks on the back of higher dollar overseas.

The domestic currency resumed lower at 63.00 per dollar as against the last weekend's level of of 62.47 per dollar at the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) Market and dropped further to 63.32 per dollar before quoting at 63.30 per dollar at 10.40 am. It moved in a range of 62.94 per dollar and 63.32 per dollar during the morning deals.

Sustained dollar demand from importers and banks in view of firm dollar overseas mainly affected the rupee value against the dollar, a forex dealer said.

In New York, the American currency jumped last Friday after the US created twice as many jobs in October as Wall Street had expected, sparking yet another round of discussion about when the Federal Reserve could slow its bond buys.

Meanwhile, the BSE Sensex dropped further by 129 points, or 0.62 per cent, to 20,537.37 at 10.50 am.

Rupee at four-week high; climbs 90 paise against dollar

MUMBAI: The rupee on Monday strengthened by 90 paise to trade at four-week high of 62.58 against the dollar at the Interbank Foreign Exchange market on increased capital inflows and dollar selling by exporters.

The rupee had settled at 63.48 against the dollar on Friday, up marginally by two paise over previous day's close.

Traders said apart from selling of the American currency by exporters and banks, a higher opening at the domestic equity market and dollar's weakness against other overseas currencies, after Larry Summers, the man tipped to be named Ben Bernanke's successor as Fed chairman, withdrew from the race, also supported the rupee. 

 Meanwhile, the BSE benchmark sensex soared by 293.30 points, or 1.49%, to 20,026.06 in early trade today.

Rupee climbs 138 paise, Sensex gains over 450 points as Rajan sparks reform hopes Sensex Blue chip shares, especially banks, jumped with NSE bank index surging as much as 9.4 per cent.

MUMBAI: The rupee on Thursday strengthened by hefty 138 paise to trade at 65.69 against the dollar at the Interbank Foreign Exchange market after fresh measures by the RBI to stem the currency's slide.

The rupee had settled at 67.07 against the dollar on Wednesday, up by 56 paise over the previous day's close.

Traders said dollar selling by exporters and banks and fresh measures announced by new RBI governor Raghuram Rajan to curb the rupee's slide helped domestic currency recover.


The dollar's weakness against other currencies overseas also supported the rupee's sentiment, they said.

Meanwhile, stock markets were up by over 2 per cent in early trade.

The BSE benchmark index soared by 488 points to 19,055.74, while National Stock Exchange's Nifty rose by 153 points to 5,601.90 in opening trade.

Banking, realty, capital goods and consumer durables stocks were leading gainers.

The new RBI governor on Wednesday announced measures, such as liberalisation of the financial market by enhancing the limits for exporters to re-book cancelled forward exchange contracts and opening a special concessional window for swapping foreign currency non-resident (FCNR) deposits and dollar funds, to support the rupee.

In the Asian region, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose by 0.95 per cent, while Japan's Nikkei was up by 0.61 per cent in early trade.

The US Dow Jones Industrial Average ended 0.65 per cent higher on Wednesday.

Rupee slumps to 67.95 on persistent capital outflows, heavy dollar demand


The rupee further slipped 193 paise to 67.95 against the dollar on persistent capital outflows and heavy dollar demand from banks and oil importers at 4.26 p.m. local time.
The domestic unit opened 28 paise weaker to 66.30 per dollar against the previous close of 66.02 due to renewed dollar demand from importers and appreciation of the American dollar overseas.
Meanwhile, the 30-share BSE index Sensex ended down 651.47 points (3.45 per cent) at 18,234.66.
According to forex dealers, besides dollar’s gains against the yen and euro on improved economic data, increased demand from importers for the American currency also put pressure on the rupee.
Brinda Jagirdar, Economist, said: "While the sharp fall in rupee and its aftermath has caused a lot of mayhem on the markets, particularly pressure on corporates and banks, its impact on exports could be positive. However, the recent PMI data coming in at below 50 (at 48.5) has highlighted the contraction in the manufacturing sector. Thus, at a time when external demand appears to be rising on the back of economic recovery - Germany's PMI is the highest since July 2011 - India's PMI is at a four-year low, so the economy is unable to ramp up its manufactured exports and benefit from a weak rupee.''
The rupee sentiment was hit on lower GDP growth data announced last week.
India’s GDP (gross domestic product) growth decelerated to 4.4 per cent — the slowest pace of expansion since the 2008 meltdown — in the first quarter (April-June) of the current fiscal.
Special dollar window
Further, the Reserve Bank of India had announced a special dollar window for oil retailers, which helped ease the offshore non-deliverable forward (NDF) contracts.
“The RBI measures limited the volumes in the currency market by more than half. Hence, the volatility reduced to some extent. Also, the RBI did not intervened for the first time in many days,” said a dealer with a nationalised bank.
The rupee saw sharp movements last week. It had hit a historic low of 68.80 against the US dollar on August 28. It had dropped 3.7 per cent during last week alone.
Rupee depreciation
The Ministry of Finance had said that the rupee depreciation is not reflective of any weakness in the economy. Also the rupee is heavily under-valued at the moment and it is being addressed.
Though a strong dollar and dollar demand from importers limited the rupee gains, investors are hoping for positive measures after the new RBI Governor assumes charge on September 5.
Call rates, G-Secs
The inter-bank call money rate, the rate at which banks borrow money from each other to meet their short-term fund requirements, was trading lower at 10.15 per cent from its previous close of 10.25 per cent.
The 7.16 per cent government security, which matures in 2023, was trading a tad higher at Rs 91.79 from the previous close of Rs 91.47 .Yields softened to 8.41 per cent from 8.47 per cent.

Bloodbath on D-Street: Sensex tumbles 651 points on FII outflows

Jittery investors pulled down the BSE benchmark Sensex by 651 points to 18,234.66 on Tuesday after the rupee depreciated below 68 against the dollar.
Similarly, the 50-share NSE index Nifty was down 209 points at 5,341.
The entire sectoral index on BSE tumbled with the banking index being hit the most followed by consumer durables and realty.
Banking index was down 5.06 per cent, followed by consumer durables 4.61 per cent, realty 4.39 per cent and FMCG 3.89 per cent.
Rupee depreciation
The sharp depreciation in rupee may widen the current account deficit further, posing a major challenge to the Government which is battling to revive the economic slowdown.
Vaibhav Agrawal, Vice-President (Research), Angel Broking, said: "The economic fundamentals in the near-term remain on shaky ground. Increase in oil prices due to the Syria situation is expected to add to the current account deficit burden, keeping the rupee under pressure. Hopes of quick reversal of interest rate hikes by RBI are waning, and the GDP and earnings growth outlook for FY'14 continues to have downside.''
Scrip movement
Most Sensex stocks plunged as investors booked profit after a rally witnessed in the last three days.
Reliance Industries fell 6 per cent to Rs 830 after the stock rose 10 per cent in the preceding four trading sessions. It made a low of Rs 803.80 on August 27.
Housing Development Finance Corporation lost five per cent to Rs 700 after a three-day rally of 12 per cent.
TVS Motor Company was down five per cent at Rs 30. Interestingly, Multi Commodity Exchange, which is facing the wrath of its group company National Spot Exchange settlement default, gained five per cent to Rs 411.
Axis Bank (-9.27 per cent), YES Bank (-9.13%), Piramal Ent (-8.93%), TV18 Broadcast (-8.70%), Indusind Bank (-8.45%), Federal Bank (-7.56%), Indiabulls Real Estate (-7.53%), LIC Housing Fin (-7.08%), Titan Inds (-7.07%) and Century Textile (-6.86%) were the major losers.
Lupin, MphasiS, Britannia Industries and Amara Raja were among the few blue-chip companies which gained on the BSE today.
Arun Kejriwal, Founder-Kris Research, said: “The Middle-East crisis affects the globe as much as it affects India. However, today’s market movement showed that India was the only market that was affected with the benchmarks breaching the four per cent levels intra-day before weighted average close. This clearly shows that India has enough internal problems affecting the rupee, economy and therefore the markets.''

Rupee trims initial losses, swings to 66.87 against dollar in early trade

The rupee trimmed its early losses but was still quoted down by 32 paise to 66.87 per dollar in late morning trade Friday on month-end demand for the US currency from banks and importers.

The rupee resumed lower at 67.00 per dollar as against the last closing level of 66.55 at the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) Market and dropped further to a low of 67.43 per dollar.

However, it recovered to 66.61 before quoting 66.87 per dollar at 1050 hours.

Month-end dollar demand from importers mainly affected the rupee value, a forex dealer said.

In the global market, the US dollar swung between gains and losses in the early trade, but the currency was poised to notch a weekly advance after Syria-related tensions weighed on risk appetite and aided the greenback.

Oil prices fell in Asian trade as fears eased of an imminent Western military strike against Syria for its alleged use of chemical weapons, analysts said.

New York's main contract, West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for delivery in October, was down USD 1.41 at USD 107.39 a barrel.

Meanwhile, the BSE-30 share index Sensex firmed up by 145 points, or 0.79 per cent, to 18,545.96 at 1055 hours.