Rupia indiana atinge mínima recorde de 93,73 frente ao dólar, estendendo queda

A rupia indiana despencou para uma nova mínima histórica de 93,73 frente ao dólar americano, sua queda diária mais acentuada desde o final de 2022. Isso amplia a tendência de depreciação que a levou a enfraquecer para 92,42 no início da semana, em meio à alta dos preços do petróleo devido aos conflitos no Oeste Asiático e à saída de investidores estrangeiros.

Dando continuidade ao seu recente declínio — tendo enfraquecido para 92,42 frente ao dólar em 17 de março de 2026, após romper a marca de 90 no final de 2025 —, a rupia indiana atingiu uma mínima histórica de 93,73 por dólar. O Economic Times noticiou que esta foi a queda diária mais acentuada desde o final de 2022. As pressões intensificaram-se devido aos preços elevados do petróleo bruto em meio à escalada das tensões no Oeste Asiático e à contínua saída de investidores estrangeiros de portfólio (FPI) diante da volatilidade global. Os operadores aguardam por possíveis intervenções do Reserve Bank of India (RBI), com previsões indicando um possível enfraquecimento adicional para 95. Isso destaca a exposição das moedas de mercados emergentes aos riscos geopolíticos e à fuga de capitais. Palavras-chave: depreciação da rupia, dólar, conflitos no Oeste Asiático, preços do petróleo, saídas de FPI, RBI, câmbio.

Artigos 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.
Imagem gerada por IA

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

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada 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 weakened further to breach 94 and approach 95 against the US dollar—a new record low—following its prior plunge to 93.73 last week. Surging crude oil prices from Red Sea tensions and fears of a prolonged Gulf war drove the slide, while Indian stocks extended losses into a fifth consecutive week. Limited Reserve Bank of India intervention has heightened concerns of additional depreciation.

Arvind Panagariya, chairman of the 16th Finance Commission, has urged the Reserve Bank of India to stop defending the rupee aggressively with foreign exchange reserves. He described the psychological barrier of 100 rupees per dollar as just a number.

Reportado por IA

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.

The exchange rate closed on May 12 at 17.2228 pesos per dollar, marking a 0.14 percent depreciation.

Reportado por IA

India's 10-year benchmark bond yield rose 7 basis points to 6.94% on Friday, signaling concerns over inflation and potential monetary tightening. High Brent crude prices above $100 per barrel, driven by the West Asia conflict, have intensified fears, compounded by the rupee falling below 94 to the dollar.

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar