Indian rupee continues steady depreciation

The Indian rupee continues to weaken against the US dollar. On Tuesday, it hovered around 95.36 in early trading. Since the beginning of this year, the currency has fallen by around 5.64 per cent.

Pressure on the Indian rupee predates the Iran war in West Asia. Last year, it fell by roughly 5 per cent against the dollar. The problem exists on both the current and capital accounts.

Global crude oil prices remain elevated due to energy market dislocations. Brent crude is currently around $113 per barrel. In April, the Indian crude oil basket averaged $114.48 per barrel, according to data from the Petroleum Planning and Analysis Cell. The current account deficit may widen to around 2 per cent in 2026-27.

So far this calendar year, foreign portfolio investors have withdrawn around $21.2 billion from stock markets. This follows outflows of $18.9 billion last year. While the Reserve Bank of India has taken steps to ease rupee stress, its short dollar position has swelled and pressure persists.

Retail fuel prices have not yet adjusted to higher global levels, but oil companies and the government face limits to the burden. The war has lasted more than two months. Pump prices will push up retail inflation, which edged up to 3.4 per cent in March. Commercial LPG cylinder prices rose by Rs 993 a few days ago.

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

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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.

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The Indian rupee sank to a fresh record low against the US dollar, fueled by soaring energy import costs during an ongoing energy crisis and accelerating capital outflows. This has intensified pressure on the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to potentially hike interest rates, ending a pause in monetary tightening.

Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra said the central bank is in “wait and watch mode” amid uncertainties from the West Asia war, with second-round effects being the real concern. In a speech at Princeton University on April 18, he stressed preventing supply shocks from embedding in price levels through inflation expectations rather than demand compression. He highlighted India’s significant exposure to the region.

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The rupiah closed weaker at Rp17,668 per US dollar on Monday, May 18, 2026. The government and Bank Indonesia have taken steps to maintain stability of the currency.

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