What's new

Rupee slumps to all-time low of 58.16

Truth be told a lower rupee is good for the Indian economy.

Whenever a countries currency weakens their exports grow because of a lower cost of doing business which results in economic growth. It also results in people spending less or buying local and saving more (which gives banks an increased ability to invest in local industry).

It's bad for those people and countries who either like to or have to purchase imported goods (ex. capital equipment to start a business, food, cars, etc...)
India's International trade during 2011-12 constituted 38.33 percent of exports and almost 61.67 percent of imports and the growth of Imports is > than the growth of Exports.So this is pretty bad for us :hang2:
 
Mhhhhhh this low is hit each summer, mostly due to rising oil and gas prices in this period....

And each summer we got a bunch of loser predicting India will fall apart into 52058206823086203 independent states due to inflation.... like Khalistan, Bengal.... etc etc etc and my personal favourite Dravidistan (who comes up with this s*** ?!).

Get a life.
 
Rupee falls 1.5 percent to record closing low


Rupee falls 1.5 percent to record closing low | Reuters

MUMBAI | Tue Jun 18, 2013 5:26pm IST

(Reuters) - The rupee fell 1.5 percent to a record closing low on Tuesday as traders worried that the country's current account deficit made the currency especially vulnerable to any scaling back of the U.S. Federal Reserve's monetary stimulus.

The rupee is expected to remain hostage to global currency movements ahead of the outcome of the Fed's monetary policy meeting on Wednesday. Any signal that the U.S. central bank will start to scale back efforts to keep interest rates low would likely result in a shift of funds out of India, dealers said.

Dealers also cited heavy dollar demand from local market participants, which traders attributed to demand related to the government's defence needs and oil refiners.

The funding of India's current account deficit remains a big concern for foreign investors. These concerns were reinforced after data on Monday showed trade deficit widened to a seven-month high in May.

The rupee is also being pressured as foreign investors have net sold rupee debt of $4.7 billion over 18 sessions, while outflows from the equity market are also picking up pace.

The Reserve Bank of India was not spotted intervening even as the rupee approached an all-time low of 58.98 hit on June 11, the last time the central bank was seen selling dollars.

"The rupee will depreciate and will surpass its record low, with RBI interventions only delaying the fall. Over time, I see it moving towards 60 to a dollar," said Param Sarma, chief executive at NSP Forex.

"The trade deficit remains high and capital inflows are not coming through."

The partially convertible rupee closed at 58.77/78 per dollar, surpassing its previous lowest close of 58.39 seen last week. It had closed at 57.87/88 on Monday.

The rupee's fall in the late session was also tailing the euro, which moved off four-month highs against the dollar after release of German ZEW data.

Despite concerns about the current account deficit, analysts say recent measures to curb gold demand could help dent imports of the yellow metal, though any such improvements would need time to filter through.

In the offshore non-deliverable forwards, the one-month contract was at 59.17, while the three-month was at 59.78.

In the currency futures market, the most-traded near-month dollar/rupee contracts on the National Stock Exchange, the MCX-SX and the United Stock Exchange all closed around 58.88 with a total traded volume of $7.6 billion.
 
rupee at 60 to the dollar。

Historical low。
 
Thank you Congress ...... thank you Antonio Mario and puppet Singh. Truly there is No Alternative to the Congress party.
 
PTI | Jun 20, 2013, 10.01AM IST
MUMBAI: The rupee on Thursday plunged by a whopping 130 paise to hit life-time low of 60 against the US dollar in early trade on the Interbank Foreign Exchange on strong demand for the American currency from banks and importers.

Besides, dollar's strength against major currencies overseas on comments by Federal Reserve chairmanBen Bernanke that the central bank may scale back its monetary stimulus programme later this year weighed on the domestic unit, dealers said.
They said weak domestic fundamentals such as record current account deficit and high inflation concerns too put pressure on the rupee.

so this is only the start, as the FED will only exit its QE by the middle of next year, this leaves a long gun for major emerging economies especially India.
 
This continuous drop is causing real problems as the RBI would be reluctant to cut interest rate even as the inflation tames, hence hinders the GDP growth. Huge current account deficit is another issue for a developing economy that does not have a hard currency. The Indian finance is looking shakier everyday.
 
Back
Top Bottom