
Indian rupee steadies to cap rough week dominated by Trump's tariff jolt
The rupee closed at 87.54 against the U.S. dollar on Friday, a tad higher than its close at 87.5950 in the previous session. On the week, the currency declined 1.2%, its worst performance since December 2022.
The South-Asian currency fell to 87.74 on Thursday, just shy of its all-time low of 87.95 in February, following President Donald Trump's announcement of a steeper-than-expected 25% tariff on Indian imports.
Firm intervention by the central bank on Friday helped the rupee find some footing, but traders and analysts expect a depreciation bias in the near term.
Consistent foreign outflows from local stocks alongside elevated corporate dollar demand are likely to keep the local currency under pressure, traders said. Foreign investors net sold $2 billion of Indian equities in July.
India's equity benchmarks, the BSE Sensex and Nifty 50 were lower on the day and logged their fifth consecutive weekly fall.
Meanwhile, Asian currencies fell after the U.S. imposed sweeping new tariffs on dozens of trading partners. The Korean won led losses with a near 1% fall.
Indian rupee suffers worst monthly drop since 2022 on tariff blow, portfolio outflows
The Reserve Bank of India's monetary policy decision and developments related to U.S. trade tariffs will be the key drivers for the rupee next week.
'The market now firmly believes that tariffs are transactional rather than ideological,' ING said in a note.
'Perhaps the biggest risk now is that of secondary sanctions on the likes of China, India and Turkey as Washington tries to turn the screws on Russia and those buying its cheap oil,' the brokerage added.
The dollar index was up 0.1% at 100.1, as investors await key U.S. labour market data later on Friday to gauge the future path of policy rates in the world's largest economy.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Recorder
30 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
Indian jeweller Titan eyes shifting some manufacturing to Gulf as US trade tensions escalate
DUBAI: India's biggest jeweller and watchmaker Titan is exploring shifting some manufacturing to the Middle East Gulf to maintain low-tariff access to U.S. markets amid trade tensions between Washington and New Delhi, Managing Director C.K. Venkataraman said on Tuesday. Titan, part of the Tata Group conglomerate, announced this month plans to acquire a majority stake in Dubai-based luxury retailer Damas, which operates 146 stores across the Gulf. In light of the deal, valued at $283 million, Venkataraman told Reuters the region is being considered 'as a manufacturing base to export to the U.S.' His comments reflect how global companies may seek new routes to navigate trade barriers, as the U.S. levies or threatens tariffs on international trade partners. Last month, U.S. President Donald Trump slapped a surprise 25% tariff on imports from India and threatened further hikes this week over India's purchases of Russian oil. In contrast, the United Arab Emirates faces a 10% tariff under Trump's baseline rate. Indian jeweller Titan to buy large stake in Dubai's Damas Titan's Tanishq brand has several U.S. stores and is planning a major expansion, while its diamond-focused label CaratLane launched in the U.S. in October, the company said. Titan began talks to buy Damas in 2024, before U.S. trade policy shifts came into focus. Shifting some manufacturing to a Gulf Cooperation Council country would be a way to mitigate recent rises in U.S. tariffs, Venkataraman said in a video call with Reuters. The U.S. is a less feasible manufacturing base due to cost and skills constraints, especially for artisan-made jewellery, he said. 'If the tariffs remain like what they are currently threatened to be, then any arbitrage on a tariff … any significant arbitrage would be meaningful for us to consider,' Venkataraman said.


Business Recorder
30 minutes ago
- Business Recorder
Wall Street pares gains after fresh economic data; earnings in spotlight
Wall Street's main indexes gave up opening gains on Tuesday after data showed U.S. services activity stalled, while investors continued to assess the latest batch of corporate earnings. At 10:07 a.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 63.46 points, or 0.14%, to 44,110.18, and the S&P 500 lost 1.86 points, or 0.03%, to 6,328.08. The Nasdaq Composite gained 37.45 points, or 0.18%, to 21,091.04. U.S. services sector growth unexpectedly stalled in July, as new orders barely budged and hiring slipped further - even as input costs soared at their fastest pace in nearly three years - highlighting how uncertainty around the Trump administration's tariff policy continues to weigh on businesses. Wall Street had roared back to life on Monday by posting its best session since May 27 and recouping last week's losses when disappointing July jobs data and sharp downward revisions to prior months fueled expectations of a Fed rate cut in September. As per CME Group's FedWatch tool, odds of a September cut stands at 90%, up sharply from 63.3% just a week ago – and market watchers are eyeing at least two quarter-point cuts by year-end. Earnings from major names on Tuesday include Advanced Micro Devices, Snap and Rivian. Pfizer gained 3.6% in after raising its annual profit forecast, while Palantir Technologies rose 8.6% as it boosted itsannual revenue forecast. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump's decision to fire the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, responsible for past jobs data, stoked investors' fears about the integrity of economic data. Wall St rebounds as Fed rate cut bets intensify on weaker payrolls Trump on a CNBC interview said he would 'shortly' announce his pick for an open seat on the Federal Reserve's board of governors and possibly his nominee for Fed chair as well. 'You can announce who the next chair is, but I don't think that Chair Powell will be going anywhere until the end of his term. I also don't think that whoever is announced as the new Fed chair will really be impactful,' said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth. Investors also weighed the impact of U.S. tariffs on global economies and corporate earnings. Trump signaled that the U.S. could soon slap a 'small tariff' on pharmaceutical imports, with the potential for steeper rates down the line. He also hinted at progress toward a trade deal with China, suggesting a possible meeting with President Xi Jinping by this year's end if talks succeed. Beyond last week's jobs data jolt, Wall Street has stayed buoyant, fueled by blockbuster earnings from the 'Magnificent 7' tech giants, with Nvidia's results on deck in three weeks. Reflecting the market's upbeat mood, HSBC just boosted its S&P 500 year-end target by more than 800 points to 6,400, citing AI excitement and easing U.S. policy uncertainty. Caterpillar slipped 0.3% after reporting a lower second-quarter profit, hurt by sluggish demand for construction equipment and higher costs tied to U.S. tariffs. KFC parent Yum Brands fell 2.8% after missing estimates for second-quarter comparable sales and profit. Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 1.29-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and by a 1.07-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq. The S&P 500 posted 31 new 52-week highs and four new lows, while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 54 new highs and 40 new lows.


Business Recorder
an hour ago
- Business Recorder
Indian biscuit maker Britannia misses profit estimates, but flags urban demand uptick
Britannia Industries posted first-quarter profit below estimates on Tuesday, but the Indian biscuit maker said urban consumption — dull for a few quarters — is picking up. The seller of 'Marie Gold' and 'Bourbon' biscuits joins other domestic consumer goods makers such as Hindustan Unilever and ITC in forecasting early signs of a recovery in urban demand, aided by easing local inflation. India's annual retail inflation slowed every month in the quarter, easing to a six-year low in June at 2.1%. That helped spur a 'marginal uptick in consumption across both urban and rural markets,' said Varun Berry, managing director and chief executive. Britannia's quarterly sales grew 9.8% to 45.35 billion rupees ($516.5 million). The firm had previously flagged rise in popular demand for packaged food and confectionery items such as croissants, wafers and flavoured shakes - usually more likely to be bought on impulse. India's Bharti Airtel posts quarterly profit jump on tariff gains But total spends rose 10.4%, led by a 15% jump in raw material costs. Britannia has been hiking prices to partly offset the higher costs of raw materials such as cocoa, flour and palm oil. Profits in the reported quarter came in at 5.21 billion rupees, up 3% on-year, but below analysts' average estimate of 5.7 billion rupees, according to data compiled by LSEG.