Currencies

Rupee under pressure from outflows


MUMBAI (June 4): The Indian rupee is seen opening slightly weaker on Thursday, pressured by equity outflows and soft Asian cues, while expectation around ​steps to support the currency may offer relief.

The rupee is ‌expected to open in 95.74-95.78 range, per traders, having settled at 95.7050 on Wednesday. After staging a brief relief rally to the 94.70 level, the currency has come under renewed ​pressure.

A pickup in equity outflows and fading hopes of a ​US-Iran detente have put the rupee back on the back ⁠foot. A prolonged war in the Middle East is a key risk for net ​energy importer India.

Foreign investors pulled nearly US$600 million (RM2.41 billion) from Indian equities on Wednesday, ​per preliminary data, after about US$3 billion of outflows in the prior three days.

The pace of June outflows has already nearly matched May’s total.

The combination of equity outflows and ​what appears to be the most serious flare-up since the US-Iran ​ceasefire reignited the uptrend in dollar/rupee, a currency trader at a private sector bank ‌said.

The ⁠rupee, however, may be supported by expectations of measures to bolster the currency amid the fallout from the US-Iran conflict, the possibility of which has been speculated over by market participants for several weeks.

India is set ​to remove capital ​gains tax on ⁠foreign portfolio investments in government securities to attract overseas capital, The Economic Times reported on Thursday.

Meanwhile, most Asian currencies weakened and ​regional equities slipped. Renewed US-Iran fighting rattled risk assets, ​while ⁠mixed signals on de-escalation kept investors wary.

Israel and Lebanon agreeing a ceasefire could potentially open the door for talks to advance, ING Bank said in ⁠a ​note, pointing out that Iran has been adamant ​that any ceasefire with the US is dependent on a halt in fighting in Lebanon.

Uploaded by Siow Chen Ming



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