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Lyrical Mockery

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Some links about Rupee, since a certain member is flooding the forum with sensational news that rupee has collapsed.


http://www.firstpost.com/investing/rupee-posts-biggest-1-day-gain-in-more-than-2-yrs-145990.html

The rupee surged 1.4 percent on Thursday and posted its largest single-session rise since May 2009, powered by hopes of dollar inflows, a day after the world’s six major central banks announced co-ordinated action to help ease the euro zone crisis.

Strong gains in local shares, mirroring global equities, and the euro’s sharp climb buoyed the rupee, traders said.

Robust interest from foreign investors at the debt limit auction on Wednesday added to the sanguine outlook on dollar inflows and boosted the local currency, they said.

The enhanced $10 billion debt limit for foreign institutional investors (FIIs) received bids worth $14 billion, four market sources said on Wednesday.

The partially convertible rupee ended at 51.46/47 per dollar, after gaining as much as 51.40 — a level last seen on November 18 — in early trade. It had closed at 52.20/21 on Wednesday.

The rupee had last witnessed such a sharp rise on 18 May, 2009, when it climbed more than 3 percent on the back of a 17-percent surge in local equities, after the re-election of the Congress party-led ruling coalition.

The US Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and the central banks of Canada, Britain, Japan and Switzerland said on Wednesday they would lower the cost of existing dollar swap lines by 50 basis points from December 5, and arrange bilateral swaps to provide liquidity for other currencies.

Rupee still vulnerable


Despite the rupee’s strong performance on Thursday, the local currency was still open to a correction, traders said.

“After Wednesday, market is hoping for bigger and better things from ECB and European policy makers to help the euro zone out of the debt crisis,” said Priyanka Kishore, forex strategist at Standard Chartered Bank.

“But portfolio flows are unlikely to be a one-way bet, until more concrete progress is made on solving the euro zone crisis. So rupee remains vulnerable to bouts of risk aversion.”

Foreign funds are still net sellers this year of $527 million of local shares as of Tuesday, compared with a record investments of more than $29 billion in 2010.

The rupee had declined 6.7 percent in November and is the worst performer among Asian peers this year.

Traders said gains in the euro too were expected to be limited ahead of next week’s summit of European Union leaders and could cap the rupee’s rise.

“Euro still looks vulnerable and the dollar inflow has to materialise for the rupee to see continued rise. Domestic factors like trade deficit, slowing growth, remain negative,” said a senior forex dealer with a private-sector bank.

The euro was at $1.3473 at end of rupee trade, while the index of the dollar against six major currencies was at 78.276 points.

The one-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoted at 51.76.

The one-month onshore forward dollar premium was at 27.75 points from 28.75 on Wednesday, the three-month was at 67.25 points from 64, and the one-year premium was at 186.50 points, from 165.25.

In the currency futures market, the most traded near-month dollar-rupee contracts on the National Stock Exchange ended at 51.70, while on the United Stock Exchange and the MCX-SX they both ended at 51.71. The total volume at $5.08 billion.

Reuters

---------- Post added at 01:39 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:39 AM ----------

Rupee logs biggest 1-day gain in more than 2-1/2 yrs | Reuters

MUMBAI | Thu Dec 1, 2011 6:34pm IST

(Reuters) - The rupee surged 1.4 percent on Thursday and posted its largest single-session rise since May 2009, powered by hopes of dollar inflows, a day after the world's six major central banks announced co-ordinated action to help ease the euro zone crisis.

Strong gains in local shares, mirroring global equities, and the euro's sharp climb buoyed the rupee, traders said.

Robust interest from foreign investors at the debt limit auction on Wednesday added to the sanguine outlook on dollar inflows and boosted the local currency, they said.

The enhanced $10 billion debt limit for foreign institutional investors (FIIs) received bids worth $14 billion, four market sources said on Wednesday.

The partially convertible rupee ended at 51.46/47 per dollar, after gaining as much as 51.40 -- a level last seen on November 18 -- in early trade. It had closed at 52.20/21 on Wednesday.

The local currency had last witnessed such a sharp rise on May 18, 2009, when it climbed more than 3 percent on the back of a 17-percent surge in local equities, after the re-election of the Congress party-led ruling coalition.

The U.S. Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and the central banks of Canada, Britain, Japan and Switzerland said on Wednesday they would lower the cost of existing dollar swap lines by 50 basis points from December 5, and arrange bilateral swaps to provide liquidity for other currencies.

RUPEE STILL VULNERABLE

Despite the rupee's strong performance on Thursday, the local currency was still open to a correction, traders said.

"After Wednesday, market is hoping for bigger and better things from ECB and European policy makers to help the euro zone out of the debt crisis," said Priyanka Kishore, forex strategist at Standard Chartered Bank.

"But portfolio flows are unlikely to be a one-way bet, until more concrete progress is made on solving the euro zone crisis. So rupee remains vulnerable to bouts of risk aversion."

Foreign funds are still net sellers this year of $527 million of local shares as of Tuesday, compared with a record investments of more than $29 billion in 2010.

The rupee had declined 6.7 percent in November and is the worst performer among Asian peers this year.

Traders said gains in the euro too were expected to be limited ahead of next week's summit of European Union leaders and could cap the rupee's rise.

"Euro still looks vulnerable and the dollar inflow has to materialise for the rupee to see continued rise. Domestic factors like trade deficit, slowing growth, remain negative," said a senior forex dealer with a private-sector bank.

The euro was at $1.3473 at end of rupee trade, while the index of the dollar against six major currencies was at 78.276 points.

The one-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoted at 51.76.

The one-month onshore forward dollar premium was at 27.75 points from 28.75 on Wednesday, the three-month was at 67.25 points from 64, and the one-year premium was at 186.50 points, from 165.25.

In the currency futures market, the most traded near-month dollar-rupee contracts on the National Stock Exchange ended at 51.70, while on the United Stock Exchange and the MCX-SX they both ended at 51.71. The total volume at $5.08 billion.

---------- Post added at 01:41 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:39 AM ----------

Indian Rupee | US Dollar | American Currency | Interbank Foreign Exchange

Mumbai, Dec 5: The Indian rupee fell by 24 paise to an early low of Rs 51.44 per US dollar in early trade today (Dec 5) on fresh demand for the American currency from banks and corporates on the back of a higher dollar in overseas markets.

The rupee resumed lower at Rs 51.27/28 per dollar on the Interbank Foreign Exchange, as against the previous weekend's close of Rs 51.20/21 per dollar, and moved down further to Rs 51.44 per dollar before quoting at Rs 51.39/40 per dollar at 1030 hours.

The domestic currency moved in a range between Rs 51.23 and Rs 51.44 per dollar during morning deals.

Renewed dollar demand from banks and corporates on the back of a higher dollar in overseas markets mainly affected the rupee value against the dollar, a forex dealer said.

In New York, the dollar moved up against the euro and other major currency rivals last Friday, as key meetings on the euro zone debt crisis prompted traders to unwind big positions.

Meanwhile, crude oil firmed up in Asian trade today after Iran's military reportedly said it had shot down a US drone, analysts said.

New York's main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in January, was up by 33 cents at USD 101.29 a barrel.

PTI
 
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The rupee jumped on Thursday against the US dollar as the currency rose in line with other Asian peers after central banks across the world unleashed measures to boost liquidity amid mounting concerns about the eurozone debt crisis.

The partially convertible Indian currency rebounded after notching its biggest monthly loss in almost two decades.

Rupee climbs as stocks rally, dollar softens

---------- Post added at 02:17 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:15 AM ----------

Thanks for starting this thread.....some chines doing party on other thread...LOL
 
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I just started this thread so that other threads are not flooded by the rupee volatility.

i see it pretty useless to discuss the same thing in all threads.
 
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Rupee slide halts after RBI's intervention

MUMBAI: The Indian rupee gained 74 paise to Rs 52.90 per US dollar in opening trade on Friday after the Reserve Bank of India imposed restrictions on forward trading to check the slide of the domestic currency, which had tumbled to a record low of Rs 54.30 per dollar on Thursday.

Dealers said the sharp recovery of the rupee was due to restrictions imposed by the RBI on forward trading in the local currency by FIIs and traders, besides the cap fixed on banks' exposure to the forex market.

In addition, a higher opening in the equity market ahead of the RBI's credit policy review later in the day and gains registered by other currencies against the US dollar supported the rupee's rise.

Rupee slide halts after RBI's intervention - The Times of India

I do not know whether this intervention is good or not
 
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We have some the best intellectual and economic wizards working at RBI they are capable of handling any crisis .... so chill guys ......:cheers:
 
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I expect the Rupee to drop to about 55 per US dollar before stablizing at that rate, but I will not be surprised if it drops to 60. The global economy is suffering at this very moment. Europe and American investors are shoring up their own finances by withdrawing money out of emerging markets (i.e. BRIC members). At the same time, export market has shrunk for BRIC, creating double hardship.

Everyone is in the same boat together. Bad news for India isn't good news for anyone else either.
 
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I will be surprised if it goes much over 55, because thats the line in the sand where RBI will start taking strong steps
 
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Reading at title, I thought it was about rupeenews (Pakistan News site)
 
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I will be surprised if it goes much over 55, because thats the line in the sand where RBI will start taking strong steps
Problem is that the decline of Rupee is caused by foreign investors withdrawing their assets, not from within India itself. In that case, options are really limited, especially when Rupee is a freely traded currency. China is also in the same situation where foreign investors are taking their money home, but is a little more well protected since the currency is more tightly controlled.
 
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Problem is that the decline of Rupee is caused by foreign investors withdrawing their assets, not from within India itself. In that case, options are really limited, especially when Rupee is a freely traded currency. China is also in the same situation where foreign investors are taking their money home, but is a little more well protected since the currency is more tightly controlled.

I think counterfeit money is not helping either
 
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Problem is that the decline of Rupee is caused by foreign investors withdrawing their assets, not from within India itself. In that case, options are really limited, especially when Rupee is a freely traded currency. China is also in the same situation where foreign investors are taking their money home, but is a little more well protected since the currency is more tightly controlled.

I think the inflow of money is also under check constantly by RBI. Not much speculation money is allowed in, i think some 2 years back there was this incident of overseas investors using instruments like participatory notes or some others to invest and get out fast and it hit the stock exchanges i think. From then inflow is monitored better. Some expert comments can help.
 
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Pakistani Rupees hit all time low of PKR 90/ Dollar.

US dollar touches all time high | Pakistan Today | Latest news, Breaking news, Pakistan News, World news, business, sport and multimedia

Karachi - On Monday, US dollar has touched its all time high selling at 90, and one of the main reasons conducive for Pakistani Rupee depreciation is widening current account deficit. That made the PKR depreciate sharply after hitting a 116-day low of PKR 90 per US dollar in interbank on December 19. On December 16 rupee posted a slight rebound to 89.565. Rupee has seen more volatility since the start of December 2011, primarily owing to liquidity shortage and secondly as concerns over Pak-US ties intensified. Over the period PKR has shredded almost 4.2 per cent FY12TD while on annual comparison this translates into 9.5 per cent depreciation. PKR likely to reach 91.6/USD : Saad Khan at AHL said that in coming weeks we expect PKR to broadly remain stable after a recent boost in FX reserves of $10 million, allowing the total reserves to reach its $16.69 billion mark.
FY12 c/a deficit forecasts to USD3.3bn: He further said we expect a sharp downward adjustment in the c/a deficit in FY12. Our revise estimate suggests c/a deficit likely to reach $3.3 billion by FY12-end or 1.4 per cent of total GDP. This in our view is likely to come on the back of sluggish export growth of five per cent YoY to $26 billion, due to lower commodity prices but also due to the noticeable slowdown in energy constraints.
While our import projections remain on the higher side at $41.1 billion (15per cent YoY) owing high energy based consumption. Incorporating these changes we estimate the trade deficit likely to hover around $14.7 billion against $10.5 billion in FY11, he added. Imports drop to lowest during the 5MFY12: The latest balance of payments data for the period 5MFY12 pointed to a current account (c/a) deficit of $2.1billion, against $478million corresponding period last year. However, interestingly the break-up of current pattern of deficits reveals that it is not based on rising import bill, which for the month stood at $2.99 billion, down by seven per cent MoM. The overall energy based import still showed a handsome growth of eight per cent MoM (two per cent YoY).
 
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I think the inflow of money is also under check constantly by RBI. Not much speculation money is allowed in, i think some 2 years back there was this incident of overseas investors using instruments like participatory notes or some others to invest and get out fast and it hit the stock exchanges i think. From then inflow is monitored better. Some expert comments can help.
Problem with India is its large trade deficit, which needs external money to keep the economy afloat. When that dries up, it will impact inflation in the country significantly. Of course, cheaper currency boosts export, but India imports way more than it does export. RBI may be able to exert some degree of control to how fast money flows in and out, but ultimately it's more of a time delay. Structurally you guys have some major flaws in your economy that needs to be fixed, and quickly.
 
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