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The domestic currency opened stronger at 81.97 versus a dollar, and hit an intraday high at 81.83, before closing at 81.85 – up 23 paise from its previous close.
“The dollar looks vulnerable despite the good US non-farm payroll data as the market factors in rate cuts in 2024 due to the expectation of a recession,” said Anil Kumar Bhansali, head of treasury, Finrex Treasury Advisors.
“The rupee took cues from the positive EM and DM currencies which gained nearly 0.50 per cent after a softened US CPI report, which hurt the DXY (dollar index). Backing the gains were robust FII flows into equities, bringing in over Rs 7,300 crore, so far, in merely six sessions of April as risk-on sentiment takes over,” said Amit Pabari, managing director, CR Forex.
“On the contrary, the USDINR is likely to move towards 82.50-82.80 levels due to geopolitical tensions and squeezing interest rate differential leading to bond outflows as the RBI pauses rate hikes; the Fed is expected to continue with the same (rate hike) at least by another 25 bps,” he added.
“The Indian trade deficit, which was higher than last month, came at $19.73 billion against $18.53 billion a year ago. However, combining the service data, the deficit was at just $ 6.03 billion. The data looks encouraging and can narrow the current account deficit of the country,” Bhansali added.
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