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Rupee Posts Modest Gains on Corporate Hedging

MUMBAI, July 3(Reuters) - The Indian rupee was a tad stronger on Friday but on course for a weekly ​decline as hedging demand and intermittent maturities of non-deliverable ‌forward contracts blunted the boost from a broadly softer dollar.

The rupee was at 95.27, up 0.1% from its previous close and tracking modest gains across most ​Asian currencies after softer-than-anticipated U.S. payroll growth data eased expectations of ​rate increases in the United States.

The dollar index eased ⁠0.2% to 100.7, with traders in the interest rate futures market scaling ​back the odds of a Federal Reserve rate hike in September to ​about 50%.

"While Fed tightening is priced as a base case, the urgency for tightening has diminished somewhat for the immediate term and should provide some comfort ​for sentiment," analysts at DBS said in a note.

Despite a pickup ​in foreign portfolio inflows into Indian government bonds and a broadly weaker greenback, ‌the ⁠rupee has struggled to benefit in the face of corporate dollar demand and recurring expiries of NDF contracts, traders said.

"A move towards the 95.80-96 zone could spark a fresh bout of importer dollar buying, ​but it's quite ​likely the central ⁠bank won't allow a swift fall either," a trader at a private bank said.

Elsewhere, Indian equities tracked regional ​stocks higher, while the yield on the 10-year government ​bond ⁠was little changed as traders awaited a hefty auction of the benchmark note.

Overseas investors have stepped up bond purchases in anticipation of an inclusion in ⁠the ​Bloomberg Global Aggregate Bond Index, buying nearly $500 ​million of debt in the first two days of July after a record $3.1 billion ​in June.

Reporting by Jaspreet Kalra; Editing by Sonia Cheema and Rashmi Aich

Source: Reuters


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