The Indian rupee opened marginally stronger at 89.2050 per US dollar on Thursday, up around 0.07% from the previous close of 89.27. The small move reflects a cautiously positive risk tone, steady portfolio flows, and expectations that the Reserve Bank of India will lean against sharp currency swings.
Opening move and market context
The rupee’s firmer start near 89.20 signals mild demand for the local currency after recent sessions saw it test record-weak levels versus the dollar. The opening print suggests that exporter dollar selling and selective foreign inflows are balancing out routine importer hedging, keeping early trades confined to a narrow band.
Drivers behind the appreciation
Overnight softness in the dollar index and stable US Treasury yields are supporting emerging-market currencies, giving the rupee modest breathing room. At the same time, expectations of an upcoming domestic rate cut, along with the central bank’s track record of intervening to smooth volatility, are encouraging traders to rebuild long-rupee positions near the 89.25–89.50 zone.
Intraday focus for traders
Market participants will closely track intraday moves in the dollar index, crude oil prices and US data releases for direction cues. A sustained move below 89.20 could invite further rupee gains, while any resurgence in global risk aversion or higher US yields may quickly push USD/INR back toward recent highs.
Key highlights
Rupee opens at 89.2050 per US dollar, versus 89.27 in the previous session.
Opening move implies a 0.07% appreciation against the greenback.
Supported by softer dollar tone, stable global yields and RBI’s perceived intervention comfort.
Traders watching oil, US data and risk sentiment for the next leg in USD/INR.
Sources: Interbank FX market quotes, Reuters real-time FX wire, global currency data dashboards.