The rupee had its biggest single-day fall in 11 years against the dollar on Thursday, amid buying of dollars by importers following the greenback's sharp falls over the last few days and also on suspected intervention by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). |
The rupee fell 1.7 per cent to Rs 43.76 a dollar at close. The decline was the biggest since March 1996. |
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Dealers said it made sense for importers, particularly oil companies, to buy dollars after the recent sharp fall versus the rupee. The rupee has gained about 7.5 per cent since July 2006. The Indian currency touched an 8-year high of 43.05 yesterday. |
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The rupee had strengthened against the dollar because of the liquidity squeeze. Banks were selling dollars to replenish rupee liquidity excessively drained after tax outflows around March 15. |
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A dealer said the RBI was buying dollars at around Rs 43.50 and this, combined with importer demand, led to the rupee dropping the sharpest in 11 years. |
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The buying of dollars by the RBI and to some extent government spending infused rupee liquidity into the banking system, causing the call rates to close at 10 per cent on Thursday. The call rate closed at 10 per cent on Thursday. |
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The average weighted call rate yesterday was over 25 per cent. |
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