Rupee Rises 22 Paise To 82.65 Per Dollar

Rupee Rises 22 Paise To 82.65 Per Dollar

Rupee Today: Domestic currency gains against a softer dollar

The rupee regained some ground on Monday, stalling a two-session losing streak as the dollar slipped against a basket of currencies and hopes of a demand recovery in China helped boost Asian currencies.

After falling in the previous two sessions, the domestic currency was last changing hands at 82.6525 per dollar, compared to its previous close of 82.8687 on Friday, according to Bloomberg.

“The rupee remained in a range of 82.55 to 82.85 as the RBI supported it near the 82.80/90 levels, and a fall in Brent oil to $ 79.23 per barrel released some of the pressure on the rupee. Asian currencies gained from lows, too,” said Anil Kumar Bhansali, Head of Treasury at Finrex Treasury Advisors.

Still, global recession concerns linger and the mood isn’t improving as we approach the year’s end due to softening economic data.

According to surveys published this week, economic activity in Europe, Japan, and America shrank in December. In line with this decline, China’s business confidence has reached its lowest point since the World Economics Survey began accumulating data in January 2013.

Festive cheer was muted by the prospect of future interest rate increases, as indicated by major central banks.

The Federal Reserve and European Central Bank (ECB) announced more interest rate increases last week. The Bank of Japan (BOJ), which meets on Monday and Tuesday, is speculated to be pondering changing its current ultra-dovish stance.

A report published on Saturday by the news agency Kyodo claims that Japan intends to change its 2% inflation target policy, potentially giving the central bank more flexibility.

A shift in the BOJ’s ultra-loose monetary policy, which increased the value of the yen on Monday, could result from a revision to a joint statement between the Japanese government and the BOJ about the latter’s inflation aim.

“Where there’s smoke, eventually there is fire,” Rodrigo Catril, a Strategist at National Australia Bank in Sydney, told Reuters.

“This sort of news we’re getting plays to this view that the government will open the door for the BOJ to have a more flexible approach,” he said, “and that some of this uber-undervaluation of the yen can be reversed.”

The main cause of the yen’s 15 per cent decline against the dollar this year, which has made it the worst-performing G10 currency, is the interest rate difference between rising US and stable Japanese rates.

Featured Video Of The Day

India’s Economy To Grow At 6.9% This Year: World Bank

For all the latest business News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TechAI is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.