Business Standard

Rupee weakens amid dollar bids related to expiry of currency futures

Asian peers dipped, weighed by concerns that US interest rates could remain high for longer

Indian rupee, Indian bonds market

Indian rupee fell on Wednesday, pegged back by persistent dollar demand by public sector banks. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

Reuters

Listen to This Article

The Indian rupee fell on Wednesday, pegged back by persistent dollar demand by public sector banks, which was mostly due to the monthly expiry of currency futures.
 
The rupee was at 83.4875 to the US dollar at 11:08 a.m.
 
IST, down from 83.4325 in the previous session.
 
Asian peers dipped, weighed by concerns that US interest rates could remain high for longer.
 
"Asia is struggling plus you have a public sector bank that is always on bid (on dollar/rupee)," a currency trader at private sector bank said.
 
"The bids could be for the currency futures expiry," he said, noting that the daily fix was at a slight premium.
 
 
The daily fix is the Reserve Bank of India's reference rate for the dollar/rupee, published daily in the afternoon.
 
This reference rate is used for settlement of cash-settled derivatives on the rupee. Clients place orders with banks to buy or sell dollars at the reference rate.
 
Depending on the size of their positions, banks execute orders to buy or sell at the fix. If the fix is at premium, it means there is demand to buy the dollar at the reference rate.
 
Meanwhile, traders long on the rupee are counting on the JPMorgan inflows.
 
Indian bonds will be included in the JPMorgan emerging market index from June 28, which is expected to spur inflows.
 
There is uncertainty around the size and timing of the inflows.
 
Asian currencies declined between 0.1 per cent and 0.4 per cent, with the offshore Chinese yuan back below 7.29 to the dollar.
 
Comments by a top Federal Reserve official that she would support more rate hikes if inflation remains sticky boosted the greenback. Investors awaited the US PCE data due on Friday.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Jun 26 2024 | 12:19 PM IST

Explore News