The Indian Rupee opened higher by 0.1% at 88.59 per US dollar. RBI data reveals banks’ cash balances at ₹8.75 trillion as of October 30, with government surplus cash at ₹1 trillion. Banks borrowed ₹6.24 billion via the Marginal Standing Facility (MSF), reflecting active liquidity management.
                                        
                        
	The Indian Rupee edged up today, opening at 88.59 against the US dollar, a 0.1% gain from the previous close of 88.6950. This modest strengthening aligns with tightening liquidity conditions and steady demand for the currency amid macroeconomic stability.
	
	According to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data, banks’ overall cash balances stood at a healthy ₹8.75 trillion on October 30, signaling ample liquidity within the banking system. Additionally, the government maintained a substantial surplus cash balance of ₹1 trillion with the RBI, earmarked for upcoming auctions, underscoring prudent fiscal management.
	
	The RBI also reported refinance facilities amounting to ₹115.18 billion utilized by banks and borrowing worth ₹6.24 billion through the Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) on the same day. The MSF borrowing reflects banks managing short-term liquidity fluctuations and maintaining adequate reserves.
	
	The confluence of sound monetary liquidity, government cash buffers, and currency stability bodes well for India’s financial ecosystem in the near term, supporting overall economic confidence and credit growth prospects.
	
	Key Highlights
	
	Indian Rupee opens 0.1% stronger at 88.59 per US dollar.
	
	Banks hold ₹8.75 trillion in cash balances as of October 30.
	
	Government surplus cash balance of ₹1 trillion with RBI for auctions.
	
	RBI refinance utilization: ₹115.18 billion on October 30.
	
	Banks borrowed ₹6.24 billion via Marginal Standing Facility to manage liquidity.
	
	Indicators signal stable liquidity and effective fiscal-financial coordination.
	
	Sources: Reuters, Reserve Bank of India official data [RTRS]