The London blasts hit the Indian foreign exchange market hard with the rupee sliding by one-fifth of a percentage point to the dollar, hitting a three-week low. Government bond prices fell in a knee-jerk reaction to the blasts but recovered later during the day. |
There was heavy demand for the dollar, as the pound sterling sank to a 19-month low against the greenback. The partly convertible rupee traded at 43.6650/6750 against the dollar, down 0.2 per cent over Wednesday's close. It had opened at 43.60/61 in the morning. |
|
The panic dollar buying by many foreign banks was compensated by exporters selling dollars, since they had been sitting on the fence with the rupee ruling at 43.50-60 for quite sometime, said dealers. |
|
While the spot rupee fell, premium on near-term, forward dollars fell following exporter selling their greenback. |
|
Six-month and one-year dollar annualised premiums closed at 1.44 per cent and 1.30 per cent, respectively, against 1.46 per cent and 1.28 per cent the day before. |
|
Among other world currencies, the pound sterling dived 1 percentage point to a 6-week low against the euro, while the Swiss franc rose to a one-month high against the sterling. |
|
The bond prices recovered by the end of the day after a fall in crude oil prices and the yield on US ten year treasury. |
|
Yields on the newly re-issued 7.27 per cent government paper maturing in 2013 rose to a high of 7.096 per cent but closed lower at 7.0765 per cent following buying support by traders. The yield on 10-year US treasury fell to 3.96 per cent from 4.09 per cent. |
|
Prices of long-term Indian papers fell by 30-40 paise in early trading sessions, but post recovery the net fall was about 15-20 paise by the end of the day. The benchmark 10-year paper 7.38 per cent 2015 closed at 7.14 per cent against a close of 7.12 per cent on Wednesday. |
|
The fall in US crude prices to $57.50 a barrel against a record high of $ 62.10 in earlier trades helped in the recovery process. |
|
|
|