Source: TH
Context:
The Indian Rupee declined by 28 paise on Tuesday, settling at 93.44 against the U.S. Dollar. Despite a rally in domestic stock markets, the local currency faced multiple headwinds from both global geopolitical tensions and recent regulatory shifts.
What are the Three Pillars of Depreciation?
1. West Asia Uncertainty
The primary driver remains the volatility in crude oil prices. As peace negotiations in West Asia face uncertain progress, oil markets have remained on edge. Since India is a massive net importer of crude, any spike in oil prices increases the demand for Dollars, putting downward pressure on the Rupee.
2. Steady U.S. Dollar (DXY)
The American currency remained resilient in global markets. A “steady” Dollar usually implies that investors are seeking the safety of U.S. assets amidst global instability, leading to a flight of capital away from emerging market currencies like the Rupee.
3. The “RBI Rollback” Effect
Forex analysts noted that the Rupee’s slide was partly influenced by the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) decision on Monday to partially lift emergency curbs.
- On April 1, the RBI had strictly capped speculative bets to prevent a free-fall.
- By easing these curbs and allowing more activity in the Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) markets, the RBI has restored market flexibility, but this also allows for natural downward adjustments in currency value that were previously suppressed.
Key Concepts
Q: Why didn’t “Positive Domestic Equity Markets” help the Rupee?
A: Usually, when the stock market (Sensex/Nifty) goes up, it attracts foreign investment, which brings in Dollars and strengthens the Rupee. However, the current global “macro” factors—oil prices and geopolitical risk—are currently so strong that they have overshadowed the positive sentiment in the stock market.
Q: What is a “Non-Deliverable Forward” (NDF)?
A: It is a foreign exchange derivative contract used to hedge or speculate on currencies that are not internationally traded (like the Rupee). They are “non-deliverable” because the profit or loss is settled in a reserve currency like the USD rather than the physical delivery of Rupees.
Q: What are “Speculative Bets” in forex?
A: These are trades made by investors who are not necessarily buying currency for trade (like importing oil) but are instead betting on which way the currency’s value will move to make a profit. While speculation provides liquidity, “excessive speculation” can cause a currency to crash faster than its actual economic fundamentals suggest.
Conceptual MCQs
Q1. According to the report, what was the closing value of the Rupee against the U.S. Dollar on Tuesday?
A) 92.50
B) 93.12
C) 93.44
D) 95.22
Q2. What was the impact of the RBI’s Monday announcement on the Rupee’s performance on Tuesday?
A) It caused the Rupee to appreciate by 50 paise.
B) It helped stabilize the Rupee at 92.00.
C) It contributed to the decline by easing curbs on speculative activity.
D) It had no impact as it only affected the bond market.
Q3. Why does “volatile crude oil” typically lead to a weaker Rupee?
A) Because India exports more oil than it imports.
B) Because higher oil prices increase India’s import bill, leading to a higher demand for U.S. Dollars.
C) Because oil is traded in Rupees on the international market.
D) Because high oil prices make Indian stocks more attractive.
Answers
- Q1: C (The Rupee settled at 93.44, a 28-paise drop.)
- Q2: C (Easing curbs restored market function but allowed for more movement in currency value.)
- Q3: B (India’s status as an oil importer creates a direct link between energy prices and currency strength.)
Exam Relevance
| Exam Focus Area | Relevance Level |
| RBI Grade B | Finance (Forex Markets, NDF, Monetary Policy Interventions) |
| UPSC CSE | GS-3 (Indian Economy: Exchange Rate, External Sector) |
| Banking (PO/Clerk) | General Awareness (Current Forex Rates, RBI Directives) |





