Economic news

Rupee Snaps 6-Session Winning Streak; Firmer Dollar Pinches

MUMBAI, June 22 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee snapped a six-day-long run of gains on Monday, as the dollar hovered near a one-year peak against ​a basket of peers even as a retreat in oil prices ‌soothed worries over spillovers from the U.S.-Iran war.

The currency ended the trading session at 94.6775 per dollar, down 0.4% from its close on Friday. The rupee had ​risen about 1% in the preceding six sessions.

Asian currencies declined between 0.3% and 0.7%. ​A hawkish turn by the U.S. Federal Reserve last week ⁠has prompted traders to add to wagers on a rate hike ​later this year, keeping the dollar index clinging to its highest levels — near the ​101 handle — since May 2025.

Futures implied tightening of around 38 basis points by the year-end. Yields on 2-year notes rose as much as 4 basis points to the highest since early ​2025 at 4.23%.

"Markets may try to use the next data or ​Fedspeak catalyst to price in 50bp of Fed tightening in 2026, but unless there is ‌a ⁠fresh Middle East escalation, lower oil prices should contain USD gains," analysts at ING said in a note.

Brent crude oil prices declined nearly 2% after U.S. and Iranian officials made "encouraging progress" at a first round of talks in ​Switzerland.

While the rupee's ​persistent bearish bias ⁠has eased in light of the retreat in oil prices and policy measures to draw dollar inflows, traders reckoned ​that the prospect of higher borrowing costs in the U.S. ​could dampen ⁠the improved sentiment.

Dollar-rupee far forward premiums, which reflect the cost of hedging against rupee depreciation, rose on Monday with the 1-year forward implied yield up ⁠10 bps ​at 2.95%.

Bankers also expect that hedging of interest obligations on ​foreign currency deposits, raised under aforementioned measures to draw dollar flows, would likely steepen the forward ​curve.

Reporting by Jaspreet Kalra; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair, Sonia Cheema and Janane Venkatraman

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree