Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the government and the RBI are keeping a watch over the situation and expressed hope that things will stabilise once the transient impact is over.
"There is not a single domestic factor in India which has either contributed to it or added to it. These are external factors. I have not the least doubt that this turbulence is transient and temporary in nature. The markets will settle down," Jaitley said.
"I just want to indicate that we have plenty of reserves which was USD 355 billion (at the last count), plus USD 25 billion that exist because some of our forward sales. We have got USD 380 billion to play with," Rajan told a banking summit in Mumbai.
"I wish to reassure the markets that our macroeconomic factors are under control as the economy is in much better position relative to many other economies," the Governor said.
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Meanwhile, the rupee tumbled sharply by 82 paise -- its biggest single day fall this year -- to settle at 66.65 against the dollar.
Brokers put down the massive fall to the meltdown in global markets, with Asian bourses ending in deep red.
While asking market players to work with external factors like concerns over Chinese economy or possible US Fed rate hike, Minister of State for Finance Jayant Singh said that volatility is part and parcel of capital markets.
Finance Secretary Rajiv Mehrishi said investors are worried over China and the government will do every thing to reassure investors.
Mirroring heavy losses in Asian markets, foreign institutional investors withdrew a net Rs 5,275 crore from the stock markets, as per provisional exchange data.
However, domestic institutional investors were net buyers of shares worth Rs 4,000 crore.
Led by Chinese rout, global stock markets plunged and commodity prices hit new lows with European and the US markets dropping up to 7 per cent in day trade.
As global markets are in deep red, domestic stock markets are expected to remain weak tomorrow as well, analysts said.