Rupee Gains 25 Paise as RBI Eases Oil Firm Dollar Demand Pressure

The Indian rupee strengthened by 25 paise against the US dollar in early trade, supported by the Reserve Bank of India's reported move to curb dollar demand from state-run oil refiners. The currency opened stronger amid improved sentiment in local equities and hopes of easing geopolitical tensions, though a firm US dollar globally provided some constraint. Precious metals saw a volatile session, with gold and silver futures trading with modest gains as experts cited a cautiously positive bias. Meanwhile, Brent crude oil prices fell over 1%, and domestic equity indices opened flat-to-positive.

Key Points: Rupee Strengthens After RBI Curbs Oil Firms' Dollar Demand

  • Rupee gains 25 paise to 92.95/USD
  • RBI asks oil firms to use credit line, not buy dollars
  • Gold and silver trade in choppy session
  • Geopolitical sentiment improves on ceasefire reports
2 min read

Indian rupee strengthens 25 paise as RBI curbs dollar demand from oil firms

The Indian rupee rose 25 paise to 92.95/USD as the RBI directed state-run oil refiners to use a credit line, reducing dollar demand pressure.

"the bias remains cautiously positive, with macro factors offering some support - commodity market experts"

Mumbai, April 17

The Indian currency strengthened by 25 paise to 92.95 against the US dollar in early trade on Friday, supported by easing pressure on the currency after the Reserve Bank of India reportedly asked state-run oil refiners to use a special credit line instead of buying dollars.

The domestic currency opened stronger after closing at 93.20 in the previous session, amid improved sentiment in local equities and hopes of easing geopolitical tensions.

However, the currency remained somewhat constrained by a firm US dollar in global markets.

Meanwhile, precious metals -- gold and silver -- witnessed a choppy session on Friday.

Gold futures (June 5) were trading at Rs 1,53,250, up Rs 98 or 0.06 per cent. The yellow metal touched an intraday high of Rs 1,53,301, rising Rs 149 or 0.09 per cent, while at the lower end, it slipped to Rs 1,53,010, down Rs 142 or 0.09 per cent.

On the other hand, silver futures (May 5) gained 0.83 per cent or Rs 2,088 to hit an intra-day high of Rs 2,50,716. The white metal touched an intraday low of Rs 2,49,300, up Rs 672 or 0.27 per cent.

According to commodity market experts, the bias remains cautiously positive, with macro factors offering some support. "However, a decisive move above resistance levels is needed to strengthen momentum further," they said.

For silver, they added that the tone remains cautious, with macro factors providing support, though momentum is still developing and requires confirmation for a sustained uptrend.

Meanwhile, Brent crude -- the global oil benchmark -- traded at $97.99 per barrel, down more than 1 per cent.

Similarly, US WTI crude fell nearly 2 per cent to an intraday low of $92.91.

On the geopolitical front, sentiment improved after reports of a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, along with expectations of progress in the US-Iran talks.

In the domestic equity market, benchmark indices opened on a flat-to-positive note, lending support to the rupee.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Interesting to see how interconnected everything is. Geopolitics easing helps our rupee, which in turn affects everything from petrol prices to gold rates. The 25 paise gain might seem small, but the sentiment boost is important.
P
Priya S
While this is positive news, I hope this strengthening translates to lower fuel prices soon. Petrol and diesel are still burning a hole in the common man's pocket. The RBI's step is good, but the real test is if it provides relief to us.
V
Vikram M
Silver futures up by over 2000 rupees! That's a significant jump. With the rupee getting stronger, does this mean it's a good time to look at precious metals as an investment? The article says the bias is cautiously positive.
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Rohit P
The global factors are still a worry. Brent crude is down today, but it's still near $98. As long as oil prices are high, the pressure on the rupee will remain. RBI's measures are a temporary fix, we need a long-term energy strategy.
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Kavya N
It's a smart, behind-the-scenes intervention. Instead of a big, flashy move that markets might overreact to, they've quietly asked oil companies to use a special line. This kind of nuanced management is what we need more of.

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