La rupia india alcanza un nuevo mínimo histórico ante la crisis energética y la fuga de capitales

La rupia india cayó a un nuevo mínimo histórico frente al dólar estadounidense, impulsada por el aumento de los costes de importación de energía durante la actual crisis energética y la aceleración de la fuga de capitales. Esto ha intensificado la presión sobre el Banco de la Reserva de la India (RBI) para que considere una subida de los tipos de interés, poniendo fin a la pausa en el endurecimiento de la política monetaria.

Continuando con su declive de varios meses, que registró mínimos históricos como los 93,73 en marzo y superó la barrera de los 94 en medio de las tensiones en Asia Occidental, la rupia se debilitó aún más debido al aumento de las facturas de importación de energía, según informó The Economic Times. Las acciones y la divisa indias cayeron el jueves, lastradas por los descensos en el sector metalúrgico y los bancos públicos, en un contexto de incertidumbre global, aumento de los precios del petróleo y rumores de una posible acción militar contra Irán. El RBI intervino para apoyar a la rupia, aunque no se revelaron detalles específicos. A pesar de las presiones, los mercados indios registraron su mejor desempeño de abril en 28 meses antes de cerrar el viernes por el Día de Maharashtra.

Artículos relacionados

Trading floor at Bombay Stock Exchange showing screens with Indian rupee's 9.9% FY26 decline, Asia's worst, amid oil surge and stock drops.
Imagen generada por IA

Indian rupee ends FY26 as Asia's worst performer with 9.9% decline

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

The Indian rupee depreciated by 9.88% against the US dollar in FY26, marking it as Asia's weakest currency amid record foreign investor outflows and surging oil prices. The Reserve Bank of India intervened to stabilize the currency, while domestic funds provided a record cushion against the exits. Equity indices like Nifty and Sensex recorded their worst fiscal performance since FY20.

Continuing its sharp FY26 depreciation—after breaching 94 in late March—the Indian rupee fell to a fresh record low of 95.28 against the US dollar on Tuesday, May 5. Oil prices exceeding $110 a barrel have intensified inflation and balance-of-payments worries, prompting Reserve Bank of India interventions amid curbs on foreign exchange positions.

Reportado por IA

The Indian rupee plunged to a fresh all-time low of 93.73 against the US dollar, its sharpest single-day drop since late 2022. This extends the depreciation trend that saw it weaken to 92.42 earlier in the week amid surging oil prices from West Asian conflicts and foreign investor outflows.

Indian equity benchmarks Nifty 50 and Sensex crashed more than 3% on Thursday, their steepest single-day decline since June 2024, closing at 23,002.15 and 74,207.24 respectively. Escalating West Asia conflicts drove crude above $110 a barrel, stoking inflation fears, while HDFC Bank shares tumbled over 5% following chairman Atanu Chakraborty's resignation.

Reportado por IA

The Philippine peso closed at P61.30 against the US dollar on Tuesday, April 28, marking a new record low amid global uncertainties from the Middle East conflict.

The Philippine peso closed at a record low of P60.10 against the US dollar on Thursday, March 19, amid surging global oil prices from the Middle East conflict. The weakening currency raises costs for imports, especially oil which the country heavily relies on.

Reportado por IA

The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee decided to keep interest rates unchanged at 5.25% in its February meeting, citing improved growth prospects from the recent India-US trade deal. This pauses a series of rate cuts from 2025 amid benign inflation. The decision reflects optimism about GDP growth and external sector stability.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar