The rupee slipped today owing to widespread dollar demand to cover short positions following purchases by some public sector banks. |
At 5 pm , the rupee was 44.33 per $1, weaker from 44.18 on Wednesday. State-owned banks bought dollars all through the day, dealers said. |
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They were absorbing supplies at the Reserve Bank of India's behest as the rupee had opened above the 1-year high of 44.17-44.18 it had touched Wednesday. |
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The government banks mopped up dollars from 44.17-44.26 per dollar in morning trades and at 44.20-44.22 and 44.25 levels in the afternoon trades after the rupee had recovered some losses on dollar inflows from a European bank, dealers said. |
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"44.20 is a resistance level and usually the RBI and oil companies buy dollars at that level. The dollar/rupee typically bounces back from that level," a currency dealer at a large corporate said. A large engineering company and oil companies also bought dollars today, dealers said. |
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While demand from oil companies has been strong over the last few weeks, the engineering major bought dollars after the rupee slipped to 44.30 levels, dealers said. |
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"The company has been selling over the last few days, they must have sold around $200 million and so it could have covered today," said a company's dealer. |
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This coupled with state-run banks' purchases spurred short covering by other banks, weakening the rupee to 44.37 rupees, dealers said. |
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On the supply side, intermittent dollar sales by exporters were seen, but such flows were not strong, dealers said. |
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In the forward market, premiums ended lower because dollar purchases by state-owned banks said to be for RBI led to the view that rupee supply will rise in the coming days. |
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"It is a normal phenomenon. Whenever RBI intervenes, premiums go down," the company dealer said. The benchmark 1-year premium ended at 3.02 per cent, down from 3.20 per cent Wednesday. |
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Premiums also eased as some banks reversed bought dollar positions after the steep rise of 25-30 basis points in yields since Monday. |
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Dollar sales by some exporters as the spot rupee fell to 44.35-44.37 also eased pressure on premiums, dealers said. |
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