
Indian rupee set to plumb to 2-month low at open on fears over oil-spurred outflows
MUMBAI: The Indian rupee is set to open weaker on Wednesday, nearing a two-month low, weighed down by rising crude oil prices amid escalating Iran-Israel tensions and concerns over outflows.
The 1-month non-deliverable forward indicated a open in the 86.38-86.42 range, versus 86.24 in the previous session.
The unit had already breached a support level on Tuesday, and traders said the bias remains firmly on the downside.
Brent crude futures climbed over 4% on Tuesday, with the rally holding firm through the Asian session on Wednesday, amid concerns that the ongoing Iran-Israel conflict could disrupt supplies.
The conflict has now entered its sixth day and anxiety is building over the risk of direct U.S. military involvement. U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday demanded Iran's unconditional surrender.
In a further development, three U.S. officials said Washington is deploying more fighter aircraft to the region to strengthen its military forces.
A prolonged conflict 'raises the odds of oil staying bid', and that's 'structurally bearish for Indian assets', leading to outflows, a currency trader at a Mumbai-based bank said.
He expects 86.50 to act an initial support zone, with markets staying alert to potential dollar sales by the Reserve Bank of India around that level, he said.
High oil prices tend to weigh on the Indian rupee due to the country's dependence on crude imports.
A rise in oil directly increases the demand for dollars from oil companies and leads to a deterioration in the trade balance.
Indian rupee ends nearly flat following choppy trading; forward premiums dip
Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve's policy decision on Wednesday will be in focus alongside developments in the Middle East.
While the Fed is widely expected to keep rates unchanged, market attention will be on any signs around the timing and extent of future rate cuts.
BofA Global Research expects the Fed's 2025 dot plot to shift higher, with the median projection rising by 25 basis points from the March estimate of 3.875%.
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