The Indian rupee weakened slightly by 0.05% to close at 88.66 per U.S. dollar on November 7, down from its previous close of 88.6125. The movement reflects cautious sentiment amid global rate uncertainty, dollar strength, and subdued foreign inflows into domestic markets.
The Indian rupee ended marginally lower on Thursday, reflecting a cautious trading session influenced by global monetary signals and dollar demand from importers. At 3:30 p.m. IST, the rupee was quoted at 88.66 per U.S. dollar, down 0.05% from Wednesday’s close of 88.6125. Traders noted limited volatility, with the currency holding within a narrow band throughout the day.
Major takeaways:
-
The rupee closed at 88.66/USD, marking a 0.05% decline from the previous close of 88.6125.
-
Dollar demand from oil importers and corporate outflows contributed to intraday pressure on the rupee.
-
U.S. Federal Reserve commentary and upcoming inflation data kept traders cautious, limiting aggressive positions.
-
The RBI was not seen intervening actively, allowing market-driven movement within a stable range.
-
Analysts expect the rupee to remain range-bound near 88.50–88.80 in the near term, barring major global shocks.
Sources: Reuters, X-Rates 1, ExchangeRates.org 2