The Indian bond and currency markets rallied after the US Fed hiked its key policy rates by 25 basis points and said any future rate hikes would be gradual and data- driven. The rupee strengthened to close at 66.42 a dollar, up 0.46 per cent from its previous close of 66.73. The yields on the 10-year bond fell to 7.7090 per cent from its previous close of 7.737 per cent.
At the close of market hours in India, the dollar index, which measures the greenback's strength against major global currencies, was at 98.843, up one per cent from its previous close.
The rupee was sort of an outlier in Asia, where currencies fell against the dollar.
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"The Fed rate hike has removed many uncertainties about the course the Fed would take in the coming year. Most of the recent rupee movement was due to panic. Now that is dispelled, it's time the rupee strengthens," said Satyajit Kanjilal, managing director at Forexserve.
Kanjilal expects the rupee to strengthen at 65.50-66 a dollar in the near term. According to India Ratings and Research, a Fitch arm, the rates and currency market will stand to gain in the near term. "The 10-year benchmark G-sec yield likely to soften around the 7.70 per cent mark with bias towards further softening and the Indian rupee will stabilise between 66.3-66.6/dollar during the week. With the Fed's policy normalisation underway, the Reserve Bank of India focus during the upcoming monetary policy reviews will increasingly shift to domestic parameters, critical being the growth-inflation rhetoric," the rater said.