The rupee slumped on Monday as the dollar extends gains to hit a five-week high after policymakers from Asia to Europe to Americas promised to keep raising interest rates to tame high inflation even at the cost of economic slowdown.
Bloomberg showed the rupee was last changing hands at 79.8638 per dollar, from its previous close of 79.7825, with the Indian currency trading in 79.7762 to 79.9200 range.
The top of the range level of 79.92 marks the weakest in four weeks for the rupee.
Reuters reported that the rupee dropped to 79.9125 per U.S. dollar, lowest level since July 27, compared with 79.7750 in the previous session.
According to PTI, the rupee fell 4 paise to close provisionally at 79.87 against the US dollar.
PTI reported that at the interbank foreign exchange market, the local currency opened weak at 79.90 and moved in a range of 79.78 to 79.92 during the session. It finally settled flat at 79.84 against the US dollar.
Considering the extent of bad news, it is surprising that the rupee is still holding on the stronger side of 80, a currency trader at a private bank, told Reuters.
“It is quite clear that the markets still sees 80 as a level that the RBI will want to defend,” the trader added.
A volatile equities market dragged on the rupee, as investors locked-in gains after a recent rally.
Ahead of the Federal Reserve’s Jackson Hole symposium this week, officials from the central bank maintained their aggressive monetary tightening stance, pushing the dollar index – which compares the value of the dollar to a basket of peers – to new five-week highs.
“The dollar index’s strength, weakness in the Chinese yuan and local equities is pressuring the rupee,” a trader at a private bank, told Reuters.
There is a chance the greenback will strengthen further and if it touches 110-level by the Fed’s symposium, the Reserve Bank of India may let the currency breach 80 gradually, he added.
After the rupee hit a record low of 80.065 on July 19, the Reserve Bank of India took proactive measures to protect the crucial level of 8- per dollar. Many analysts now believe there is a chance the rupee will return to this level this week, according to Reuters.
After Russia stated late on Friday that it would stop supplying European gas through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline for three days at the end of this month, the euro took the brunt of the selling pressure versus the dollar.
Concern that a three-day suspension of European gas supply later this month may exacerbate an energy crisis caused the euro to briefly fall back below parity against a strong dollar on Monday and to wallow at five-week lows.
The currency fell to as low as $0.99945, its lowest level since mid-July, and was last down 0.4% on the day.
“The euro’s fair value has been damaged by the energy shock – meaning that euro/dollar is not especially cheap even at these levels,” Chris Turner, global head of markets at ING, told Reuters.
German economy, one of the most vulnerable to delays in Russian gas supply, is “likely” to experience a recession over the winter if the energy crisis deepens, Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel told German weekly Rheinischen Post.
China’s yuan dropped to its lowest in nearly two years after the central bank cut key lending rates.
Indeed, the dollar rose as high as 6.8420 yuan in onshore trading for the first time since September, 2020 after the People’s Bank of China cut the one and five-year loan prime rates, as widely expected. That came after it eased other key borrowing benchmarks in a surprise move last week.