Gulf News

Silver lining to market cycles

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Market watchers need to keep faith that after every downturn comes the good times |

The Indian rupee has been on a short winning streak and analysts say it may be possible due to interventi­on from the Reserve Bank of India.

But due to this market interventi­on, India’s forex reserves fell $5.14 billion (Dh18.88 billion) in the week ended October 12, the biggest fall in seven years. In the week ending October 5, India had $394.46 billion of forex reserves.

Yesterday, the Indian rupee continued its winning streak for another session, closing 0.25 per cent higher at 73.55 against the dollar. The Indian currency has corrected from a record low of 74.48 struck a couple of weeks ago to 73.19 yesterday, representi­ng a 1.74 per cent rise.

Going ahead, Indian rupee woes seems to be coming to an end temporaril­y as analysts expect risk aversion triggered by higher rates may stall the dollar appreciati­on.

drop in India’s forex reserves after market interventi­on

The Indian rupee, which was the worst performing currency in Asia, has shed more than 15 per cent of its value in the year so far.

Other emerging market currencies like the Argentine peso, Turkish lira and Indonesian rupiah also took a hit.

“The pace of depreciati­on wuill slow down in the medium term. An increase of risk aversion in global markets could lead to correction in oil prices and that will be supportive of Indian rupee,” Bhavaraju said.

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