Rupee at record low, CEA draws the line: Preventing further fall a key imperative | Business News

On the day the rupee hit an all-time low of 95.75 per dollar before closing at 95.63, Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) V Anantha Nageswaran, while warning that ongoing structural shifts in the global economic order were not going to reverse, said Tuesday that stopping the rupee from falling further was one of the “central macroeconomic imperatives” of the current fiscal.
Speaking at the Confederation of Indian Industry’s (CII) annual business summit in New Delhi, Nageswaran said, “Managing the current account credibly, financing it, and preventing further currency depreciation are the central macroeconomic imperatives of FY27.” He said India’s exposure to the West Asia crisis was “structural” and presented a “live Balance of Payments stress test, with direct consequences for inflation, the current account, and the exchange rate.”
The remarks by the government’s top economist came on the day the rupee hit another all-time low, falling to as much as 95.75 per dollar during the day before closing at 95.63 – the lowest it has ever ended a session. Since the war in West Asia began, the rupee has slumped by almost 5% against the US dollar and has been Asia’s worst performing currency so far in 2026 – a period in which it has fallen by 6%.
The war has sent shockwaves through energy importing nations, especially those in Asia, with currencies weakening as foreign investors pull out money – although some countries have benefited due to sectors, particularly those related to Artificial Intelligence, performing well.
India, which is widely considered to have low exposure to AI, has seen Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) exit domestic financial markets to the tune of $23 billion since the start of the war, putting pressure on the Balance of Payments.
The Balance of Payments is the difference between the money Indians send abroad to pay for various things such as imports and investments and the money India receives from overseas for exports and in the form of remittances and capital flows.
With the import bill widening due to sharply high crude oil and gold prices, exports affected by weak global demand, FDI inflows muted, and remittances from West Asia under threat, economists are warning that India’s Balance of Payments could be in the negative zone for a third straight year in FY27.
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BofA Securities economists Rahul Bajoria and Smriti Mehra, in a report Tuesday, said, “India’s current account deficit appears set to exceed ~2% of GDP – which the RBI has historically identified as the threshold level that India can finance sustainably over the long term. However, in recent years, even a 1% of GDP has been difficult to finance due to a confluence of factors in the capital and financial account leading to persistent weakness in the exchange rate.”
And Nageswaran, while pointing out that since the start of the US and Israel’s attack on Iran, Brent crude futures prices were up 51%, urea and ammonia prices 65%, and butane 51%, said these numbers were not of a “temporary shock that will self-correct when the situation stabilises” and that it would be a “strategic error” for emerging economies to make plans for the future on the assumption that the pre-2020 global economic architecture will re-assert itself.
The CEA’s warnings come after Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Sunday and again on Monday, urged the public to change their consumption behaviour by reviving Covid-era measures such as work-from-home and virtual meetings, avoiding non-essential foreign travel and gold purchases for a year, and prioritising local goods, among others. These actions would help save the country’s foreign exchange reserves as most of these activities and purchases require import.
The request for austerity has rattled markets, with analysts cautioning that Modi’s appeal is a sign of “potential policy shift ahead”.
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“PM Modi’s comments signal that the pressure on the government fiscal finances is reaching a tipping point, that there is less appetite for further rupee depreciation, and that the burden of adjustment may be incrementally shared with consumers,” Nomura economists Sonal Varma and Aurodeep Nandi said Monday.
While global energy prices have surged over the last two-and-a-half months, the Indian government has not increased the pump price of petrol and diesel in an effort to shield consumers. However, public sector oil marketing companies (OMCs) have been bearing the losses by selling fuel below the market price, with their losses for April-June seen at Rs 1 lakh crore.
Nageswaran identified four structural shifts in the global economy – geoeconomic fragmentation in the form of trade wars and strategic decoupling, technology bifurcation, the energy transition premium, and geopolitical risk repricing – and said these are “not going to reverse”.
While India’s macroeconomic foundations – fiscal consolidation, infrastructure investment and reform record – provide a base from which the current global environment can be effectively navigated, he said that while foundations are necessary, they are “not sufficient”.
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“What is also required is the strategic clarity to recognise that the window for repositioning in trade relationships, technology partnerships, supply-chain architecture, and the coalition building that will shape the next international economic order is real, but not permanent,” he said.



