The Asian Age

Rupee falls to 73.58 against dollar

-

Mumbai, Oct. 4: The rupee on Thursday crashed to a new historic low of 73.81 to the dollar due to the twin- impact of capital outflows triggered by surging US Treasury yields and crude oil prices racing to a fouryear high.

The domestic currency closed at a record low of 73.58, down by 24 paise or 0.33 per cent, marking its third straight session of losses. The rupee has lost 110 paise or 1.51 per cent in the three sessions since Monday largely due to strong demand of dollars from oil importers amid firming crude prices and foreign capital outflows.

The dollar strengthen­ed against global peers after economic data signalled a thriving US economy which drove Treasury yields to a seven- year high of 3.23 per cent — a level not seen since mid2011.

Hawkish comments about the US economy by Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell have also boosted the dollar buying.

Emerging currencies including the rupee bore the brunt during the day as investors shifted funds from riskier assets to safe bets like the US dollar.

The dollar strengthen­ed against the Chinese yuan by 0.2 per cent to 6.9 in the offshore market and touched a fresh 20- year high against the Indonesian rupiah. South African rand, Mexican peso and Australian dollar also dropped up to 1.5 per cent.

Brent crude also breached the four- year high of $ 86 dollar per barrel level, fuelling worries over widening current account and trade deficit.

Oil prices have reached four- year peaks as the market focused on upcoming US sanctions on Iran while shrugging off the year's largest weekly build in US crude stockpiles.

“The fall in the rupee led to a sharp rise in government bond yields, due to increasing expectatio­ns that the RBI’s monetary policy committee ( MPC) could go for a bigger rate increase than expected on Friday,” V. K. Sharma, Head PCG & Capital Markets Group HDFC Securities.

India’s benchmark 10year sovereign yield rose to 8.16 per cent.

Stocks markets crashed up to 2.24 per cent due to heavy selling pressure banking, energy, pharma and IT stocks.

Foreign investors remained net sellers for a third day pulling out ` 2,760.63 crore from stock markets.

To stem the rupee fall, the Reserve Bank on Wednesday allowed oil companies to access foreign capital of $ 10 billion on a long- term basis to finance their working capital requiremen­ts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India