MUMBAI, March 25 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee weakened slightly on Wednesday but held off pressure from dollar demand linked to maturing non-deliverable forwards and foreign portfolio outflows, as the central bank intervened to support the currency.
The rupee hovered near its record low of 93.98 per dollar through the session before closing at 93.9775, down 0.1%.
Indian stocks rose after Brent crude fell below $100 a barrel, but the rupee struggled to benefit as interbank traders and importers bought dollars.
A series of NDF maturities, including Wednesday's, is expected to keep the rupee under pressure over the next week, a trader at a private bank said.
Indian stocks rose with the Nifty 50 up about 2% as investors took cues from reports that the U.S. had proposed a month-long ceasefire and sent a 15-point plan to Iran.
Equities in Asia and Europe were higher as well while futures pointed to a strong start for stocks on Wall Street, signalling an improvement in risk appetite which had been otherwise battered by worries over the conflict.
Among currencies, the dollar index was a tad higher at 99.3 while Asian FX was mostly rangebound.
Mixed signals from Washington and Tehran though have also injected caution in traders' minds.
Israel and Iran exchanged airstrikes on Wednesday, as Iran's military rejected President Donald Trump's assertion the U.S. was in negotiations to end the war, saying the U.S. is negotiating with itself.
"We are not geopolitical experts, but we would have thought Iran would have maximum leverage of high energy prices going into any negotiation. Thus, it is probably too early to expect any big drop in energy prices or a much softer dollar this week," analysts at ING said in a note.
Reporting by Jaspreet Kalra; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala, Harikrishnan Nair and Nivedita Bhattacharjee
Source: Reuters