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Rupee Hits Record Low on US-Iran Tension, Rate Fears

MUMBAI, May 20 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee fell to a record low on Wednesday as a deadlock in U.S.-Iran peace talks ​kept oil prices elevated, fuelling worries of a global inflation surge that have ‌ramped up bets on rate hikes, lifting bond yields and weighing on equities.

The rupee fell to 96.96 per dollar, breaching its all-time low of 96.6150 hit in the previous session. The currency is down 6% ​since the Iran war began in late February.

Higher energy prices and weak ​capital flows, further strained by rising bond yields, have left India ⁠facing the prospect of a steep balance of payments (BoP) deficit for the current fiscal ​year.

While a weaker rupee can serve as an automatic adjustment mechanism by raising the ​cost of imports and making exports cheaper, persistent depreciation can turn into a self-fulfilling loop and erode returns for foreign investors.

Overseas investors have pulled out over $22 billion from local stocks and bonds ​since the war started, while Brent crude prices have surged over 50%.

"We favor a ​view that unfettered FX depreciation perpetuates further depreciation, rather than achieving current account equilibrium through significant ‌devaluation," ⁠economists at Citi said in a note.

They added that energy shocks could push the dollar-rupee pair to 98 in the short term, but expect a retracement towards 95 in the second half of fiscal 2027 if the conflict resolves or policymakers intervene decisively ​to address BoP challenges.

SURGING ​YIELDS COMPOUND PAIN

Persistently ⁠high energy prices have stoked worries of a spike in a global inflation, prompting investors to raise bets on tighter monetary ​policy from central banks.

Interest rate futures show that the odds of a Federal ​Reserve rate hike ⁠have firmed, while swap markets in India are pricing in about 100 basis points of hikes over the next 12 months.

India's 10-year bond yield was last at 7.12%, up over ⁠45 ​bps since the war began, while the benchmark Nifty ​50 is down nearly 7% over the same period.

Reporting by Jaspreet Kalra; Editing by Sonia Cheema

Source: Reuters


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