• Home
  • Categories
  • News
  • Community
EN
EN
Home
CategoriesNewsGlossaryCommunityAbout Us
Contact Us
Social Media
Region
🌏International
Region
🌏International

Copyright © 2023-2026 Traderknows Ltd. All rights reserved.

Contact
Home
/
News
/
Oil Surge Nears $106: Indian Rupee Tests Record Lows as RBI Intervention Bets Mount

Oil Surge Nears $106: Indian Rupee Tests Record Lows as RBI Intervention Bets Mount

TraderKnowsTraderKnows
05-14
Summary:Driven by a 50% oil price rally amid the Iran conflict and persistent foreign outflows, USD/INR hovers near record lows of 95.7950. Traders anticipate RBI dollar-selling intervention to stem currency depreciation.
  • The Indian foreign exchange market is facing continuous selling pressure, with the USD/INR exchange rate on Thursday reported in the 95.7350 range, approaching the historical low of 95.7950 set the previous trading day, triggering strong expectations in the market for the Reserve Bank of India to sell dollars in the spot market.
  • External supply-side shocks are worsening India's balance of payments, with Brent crude oil futures recently climbing to $106.2 per barrel, marking a nearly 50% increase since the outbreak of the Iran conflict in late February, significantly boosting the foreign exchange demand of this net oil-importing country.
  • The resonance of foreign capital outflows and rising import costs is weakening the liquidity support for the rupee and testing the safety margin of India's foreign exchange reserves and the monetary authorities' tolerance for currency depreciation.

Immediate Liquidity Impact of Forex Intervention

Faced with the USD/INR rate continuously approaching historical lows, intervention by the Reserve Bank of India has become a necessary means to stabilize market volatility. Forex traders' expectations are mainly based on the central bank's recent operations in the forward and spot markets. If the monetary authorities sell dollars and buy rupees on a large scale through state-owned banks in the open market, this operation can block speculative short-selling forces in the short term but will also drain rupee liquidity from the domestic banking system. If the intervention scale is too large, short-term interest rates in the Indian money market may spike, forcing the central bank to reinject domestic currency liquidity into the market through repo operations and other tools to maintain relative stability in interbank market rates.

Repricing of the Current Account Deficit

The core driving force behind the current rupee depreciation is the worsening expectations of the current account deficit in the macro fundamentals. As one of the world's major energy-consuming countries, India's oil consumption is highly dependent on imports. Brent crude oil prices breaking the $106 mark means that India's monthly energy import bill will significantly expand. Against the backdrop of no simultaneous leap in export earnings capacity, the widening trade deficit directly translates into real structural dollar demand in the forex market. This current account deterioration triggered by soaring commodity prices forces forex market participants to recalculate India's annual balance of payments and accordingly lower the central valuation of the rupee's nominal effective exchange rate.

Negative Feedback Loop of Capital Outflows and Exchange Rates

In addition to the pressure on the current account under trade, capital flows under the financial account also pose a severe test for the rupee. As global risk appetite cools due to geopolitical conflicts, coupled with some developed economies maintaining high-interest rate environments, foreign portfolio investment funds continue to flow out of Indian stock and bond markets. Foreign investors selling Indian local assets and converting them into dollars for remittance not only directly depress asset prices but also exacerbate the imbalance of dollar supply and demand in the forex market. If expectations of rupee depreciation further solidify, it may trigger more unhedged cross-border capital to accelerate withdrawal, forming a negative feedback loop where asset price declines and currency depreciation reinforce each other. Breaking this loop often requires the monetary authorities to demonstrate strong intervention determination or a substantial reversal in macroeconomic data.

Implicit Pressure on the Yield Curve

The combination of imported inflation pressure and currency depreciation expectations is causing India's sovereign bond yield curve to face the risk of upward movement. Since the prices of imported goods like oil are denominated in dollars, the depreciation of the rupee will further amplify the transmission effect of rising commodity prices on domestic prices in India. To curb potential inflationary pressures and maintain the interest rate differential attractiveness of the domestic currency, the Reserve Bank of India faces passive tightening pressure in monetary policy. Even if the central bank chooses to keep the benchmark interest rate unchanged, the bond market will preemptively price in inflation and exchange rate risk premiums, leading to a situation where medium- and long-term government bond yields are more likely to rise than fall, thereby increasing the overall financing costs for the government and the real economy.

Risk Warning and Disclaimer

The market carries risks, and investment should be cautious. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and has not taken into account individual users' specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, viewpoints, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their particular circumstances. Investing based on this is at one's own responsibility.

The End
Previous
Next
Comments
0/1000
TraderKnows
Written byTraderKnows
Created date:2026-05-14 10:57
Last Updated:2026-05-14 11:19
Independent Analysis: Manually researched and fact-checked by the TraderKnows Compliance Team, based on public regulatory records.
Wiki
Exchange Rate

The exchange rate refers to the price of one currency expressed in another currency, namely, the exchange ratio between two currencies.

Recent Post

Trump Invokes Defense Production Act with 850 Million USD for Coal Power to Meet AI Demand

06-05

NY Fed Index Shows High Supply Chain Pressures as Geopolitical Conflicts Raise Global Inflation Con…

06-05

Japan's Real Wages Rise for Fourth Consecutive Month, Fueling June BOJ Rate Hike Bets

06-05

China Flexible Employment Exceeds 300 Million as Blue-Collar Wage Growth Outpaces White-Collar for…

06-05

South Korean Stocks Post Steepest Weekly Drop Since March as Tech Valuations Reset

06-05

China Commercial Paper Rates Drop in Early June Amid Rising Bank Demand

06-05

UK House Prices Unexpectedly Fall in May as Geopolitical Tensions Push Up Borrowing Costs

06-05

Massive Intervention Fails to Save Yen as Short Positions Surge Near Historic Lows

06-05

AI Momentum Pauses as Broadcom Outlook Misses High Expectations; Markets Await Payrolls

06-05

SpaceX Launches 75B USD IPO Roadshow as Access Blocked in Mainland China and Hong Kong

06-05

Global Gold ETFs See $2 Billion Outflows in May as Capital Pivots to Tech Assets

06-05

Nikkei Drops Over 1% on Tech Sector Pullback While Real Wage Growth Provides Support

06-05

South Korea Lifts Mandatory Reporting for Crypto Transfers Over 10M Won

06-05

Amundi Says Asian AI Stocks Supported by Fundamentals as Fed Path Poses Key Risk

06-05

Taiwan Stocks Close 1.33% Lower on Broadcom Drop But Hold Key Technical Support

06-05

Risk Warning

TraderKnows is a financial media platform, with information displayed coming from public networks or uploaded by users. TraderKnows does not endorse any trading platform or variety. We bear no responsibility for any trading disputes or losses arising from the use of this information. Please be aware that displayed information may be delayed, and users should independently verify it to ensure its accuracy.