Rupee weakness against the dollar is due to trade pressures and RBI policies.

Context:

  • The Indian rupee has weakened against the US dollar over the past year despite India’s strong macroeconomic fundamentals.

  • Factors such as trade headwinds, US tariff policies, investor sentiment, and RBI’s forex interventions have played a major role in driving exchange rate fluctuations.

  • The issue highlights the complex interaction between domestic economic strength and global financial pressures.

Key Highlights:

Recent RBI Intervention

  • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) intervened by selling US dollars in the forex market.

  • This led to the rupee strengthening by nearly 1% in a single day, showing RBI’s ability to smooth volatility.

Rupee Depreciation Despite Strong Fundamentals

  • Over the last year, the rupee has depreciated by around 6%, even though:

    • India remains the fastest-growing major economy

    • Inflation has been relatively controlled

  • This suggests that currency value depends not only on growth but also on external and financial factors.

Trade Weakness and US Tariffs

  • Trade pressures have contributed significantly to rupee weakness.

  • High US tariffs on Indian goods have:

    • Reduced export competitiveness

    • Worsened trade uncertainty

    • Lowered demand for the rupee in global markets

Investor Confidence and Equity Performance

  • Indian equity markets have underperformed compared to peers.

  • The Sensex rose only 8% between Dec 2024 and Dec 2025, indicating investor concerns over:

    • High valuations

    • Profitability outlook

    • Global risk sentiment

  • Weak portfolio flows reduce foreign currency inflows, adding pressure on the rupee.

Key Drivers Identified by Bank of Baroda Study
A BoB study highlighted major determinants of rupee movement:

  • RBI forex market interventions

  • Changes in forward contract positions

  • Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) inflows/outflows

Spot vs Forward Market Interventions

  • RBI’s forward market interventions are often more effective than spot interventions.

  • Dollar buying/selling also affects:

    • Domestic liquidity

    • Interest rates

    • Currency expectations

Limited Role of Trade Deficit in Daily Fluctuations

  • Surprisingly, the trade deficit has little immediate impact on rupee volatility because:

    • Trade data may not match real-time currency flows

    • Capital flows dominate short-term exchange rate movements

Beyond Economics: Role of Uncertainty

  • Economic fundamentals explain only 13–14% of total currency variation.

  • Global sentiment, geopolitical risks, and market speculation play a large role.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Exchange Rate: Price of one currency in terms of another.

  • Trade Deficit: When imports exceed exports.

  • Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI): Investment by foreigners in domestic financial assets like stocks and bonds.

  • Forex Intervention: Central bank buying/selling foreign currency to stabilize exchange rates.

Causes + Government Role

  • External tariffs and trade headwinds weaken rupee demand.

  • RBI uses reserves and forward contracts to manage volatility.

Benefits + Challenges

  • Benefits of intervention: Prevents excessive depreciation and imported inflation.

  • Challenges: Sustained intervention can deplete reserves and distort markets.

Impact

  • Rupee weakness raises import costs (oil, fertilizers) and may increase inflationary pressures.

  • Also affects investor sentiment and India’s external stability.

Relevant Mains Points:

Macroeconomic and Policy Dimensions

  • Currency depreciation reflects interplay of:

    • Trade conditions

    • Capital inflows

    • Central bank actions

    • Global financial environment

Trade and International Relations Angle

  • US tariff policies impact India’s exports and bilateral trade confidence.

  • Trade uncertainty reduces investment inflows, weakening the rupee.

RBI’s Role in Exchange Rate Management

  • RBI follows a managed float regime, intervening to curb volatility rather than fix rates.

  • Forward interventions help influence expectations without immediate reserve loss.

Way Forward

  • Strengthen export competitiveness and diversify trade partners.

  • Maintain adequate forex reserves for stability.

  • Improve investor confidence through predictable policies and growth in manufacturing.

  • Balance intervention with long-term market-determined exchange rate adjustment.

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS 3: Exchange rate management, inflation, external sector stability

  • GS 2 (IR): Impact of US tariffs, trade uncertainty on India

  • Prelims: Exchange rate, trade deficit, FPI, RBI intervention

« Prev October 2026 Next »
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031