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Indian rupee hits record low as global bond yield surge compounds oil pain.

foreign exchange :: 18hrs ago :: source - reuters

By Jaspreet Kalra

(Reuters) - The Indian rupee hit a record low on Monday, sliding for the seventh consecutive trading session, as a jump in global bond yields ​converged with elevated energy prices and deepened the strain on Asia's worst-performing currency ‌of the year so far.

The rupee fell to 96.3875 per dollar, eclipsing its previous all-time low of 96.1350. It ended the session at 96.3450, down 0.4% from its closing level on Friday.

The currency has slumped ​2% over the last seven trading sessions. Traders said the losses would have been ​steeper if not for market interventions by the Reserve Bank of India.

Elevated ⁠energy prices and weak capital flows have left India staring at a third consecutive fiscal ​year of a deficit in its balance of payments (BoP), straining the rupee. Economists at HSBC have ​forecast a BoP deficit of around $65 billion in the fiscal year ending April 2027.

"The continued distribution of the exchange market pressure between currency weakness and the use of FX reserves should likely continue. Currency weakness, ​in particular, can help lower the trade deficit by making exports more competitive and disincentivising ​imports by making them too expensive," they said in a Monday note.

Overseas investors have sold over $23 billion of ‌local ⁠stocks and bonds on a net basis since March, hurting the capital account at a time when the current account is stressed by elevated import prices.

Rupee's fall hastened after Iran war broke out, drawing regulatory measures

GLOBAL SELLOFF

Soaring energy prices from the Iran war have fanned inflation fears and prompted wagers on rate hikes by global central banks, knocking ​down bonds from Tokyo ​to New York.

Yields on ⁠U.S. 10-year notes hit a 15-month high of 4.631%, Japan's 10-year yield hit its highest since 1996, and their Indian counterpart climbed 6 ​bps. Efforts to end the Iran war appeared to have stalled ​following a ⁠drone strike at a nuclear power plant in the United Arab Emirates.

Brent futures hovered around $110 per barrel.

"High oil prices and now a selloff at the long end of the bond market are a ⁠bearish ​double whammy for EMFX and for risk assets in general," ​per analysts at ING.

Rupee forecasts are skewed bearish over the next 12 months

Reporting by Jaspreet Kalra; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips, Mrigank Dhaniwala and Janane Venkatraman


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