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Ahead of RBI meet, rupee jumps 17 paise to 65.01 against US dollar

Bullish performance of the local equity markets despite global stock rout further weighed on the trading mood

Press Trust of India  |  Mumbai 

Rupee

The made a strong recovery against the buoyant US to close at 65.01, surging by 17 paise on fresh bouts of selling, seemingly unfazed by escalating trade tensions between the US and

A massive unwinding of long positions by exporters and corporates predominantly lifted the forex sentiment.

Bullish performance of the local equity markets despite global stock rout further weighed on the trading mood.

Robust economic outlook marked by relatively stronger core sector activity in February, which grew 5.3 per cent, also supported the recovery momentum.

With expectations of a rate cut by the (RBI) gaining ground in the monetary policy review on Thursday, the local unit is likely to trade firm, a commented.

The RBI will review its monetary policy on 4-5 April.

The has taken a hit in recent weeks buffeted by fears of global trade war and a possible stepped-up pace of interest rate hikes by the

The Indian suffered the worst during the first quarter of the year, plunging 2.05 per cent against the USD.

In the meantime, bond yields declined after the RBI allowed banks to spread its bond trading losses.

After a long holiday weekend, resumed on strong foot at 65.07 as against last Wednesday's close of 65.18 at the inter-bank (forex) here.

A strong follow-through buying interest lifted the local unit to a new intraday high of 64.99 in mid afternoon deals before ending at 65.01, revealing a rise of 17 paise, or 0.26 per cent.

It briefly touched a low of 65.13.

The RBI, meanwhile, fixed the reference rate for the at 65.0240 and for the euro at 80.0901.

On the global energy front, crude prices staged a mild rebound after overnight sharp fall on growing concerns over supply glut after reports stated that Russian rose in March, despite the supply cut agreement.

Brent crude futures were trading higher at USD 67.94 a barrel in early Asian trading.

Meanwhile, domestic bourses extended their relief rally for the second straight day despite a far choppier start following heavy buying activity in beaten down state-run counters after the eased the provisioning norms for bond losses.

The Sensex rose over 116 points to end at 33,370.63, while Nifty jumped 33 points to 10,245.

Most Asian stocks, on the other hand ended in red spooked by an overnight sell-off on Wall Street.

Globally, the traded modestly higher against a basket of currencies amid reviving fears of a full-blown US trade war.

The index, which measures the greenback's value against a basket of six major currencies, was up at 89.78 in early trade.

The also showed more persistent strength against the pound sterling, euro and Japanese yen.

In the cross trade, the home bounced back against the pound sterling to end at 91.23 from 92.25 and recouped against the euro to settle at 79.94 as compared to 80.82 earlier.

The local unit also pulled back against the Japanese yen to close at 61.20 per yens from 61.49.

Elsewhere, the common euro recovered from Monday's selling pressure against the greenback even with the activity in the Eurozone decelerated sharply in March.

The British pound, however, traded firmly higher against the USD after the UK PMI report unexpectedly rose in March from downwardly revised reading in February.

In forward market today, premium for edged lower due to sustained receiving from exporters.

The benchmark six-month forward premium payable in August eased to 109-111 paise from 110.50-111.50 paise and the fag-forward February 2019 contract also softened to 231-233 paise from 232.50-234.50 paise previously.

First Published: Tue, April 03 2018. 23:28 IST
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