LIV: Rupee up on unwinding of long dollar positions
At 9:40am, the partially convertible rupee was at Rs46.27/28 per dollar, off a high of Rs46.22 and marginally above its previous close of 46.30/31
Reuters
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Mumbai: The Indian rupee nudged higher on Wednesday as traders unwound long dollar positions, with the US unit easing against majors.
At 9:40am, the partially convertible rupee was at Rs46.27/28 per dollar, off a high of Rs46.22 and marginally above its previous close of 46.30/31.
“There are no major cues on either sides today and the rupee is likely to be held in a range of Rs46.15-46.35,” said Madhusudan Somani, head of foreign exchange trading at Yes Bank.
“Today morning’s selling was due to the squaring off of overnight small long dollar positions. There were good oil bids at the lower levels,” he said.
Oil is India’s biggest import and refiners are the largest buyers of dollars in the local currency market.
Dealers said they would be watching the dollar’s moves versus majors and domestic shares for further direction.
The dollar index, a gauge of the US unit’s performance versus six majors, was down 0.1%.
At 9:30am, the MSCI index of Asian stocks ex-Japan was almost flat while the Nifty India stock futures traded in Singapore were down 0.5%, suggesting a flat to lower start to the local sharemarket.
Foreigners have bought $15.1 billion worth of shares so far in 2009, after selling more than $13 billion last year. The inflows have helped the rupee recover from a record low of 52.2 in March.
One-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoting at Rs46.26/29, slightly stronger than the onshore spot rate, suggesting a bullish near-term outlook.