India’s rupee could weaken to a record 100 against the US dollar if the Iran conflict drags on, with global strategists cautioning that recent central bank measures may only slow, not stop, the slide.
Analysts at Wells Fargo and VanEck flag rising crude prices as the biggest trigger, warning that a sustained oil shock will widen India’s current account deficit and stoke inflation. Options markets are already pricing in further weakness, with traders assigning a rising probability to the rupee breaching the 100 mark by year-end.
The Reserve Bank of India has responded with one of its most aggressive interventions in over a decade, capping banks’ end-of-day positions in the currency market at $100 million to curb speculative bets. However, market reaction has exposed the limits of policy action. After an initial rebound, the rupee fell to a fresh low of 95.125, underscoring persistent bearish sentiment.
Currency traders say the trajectory now hinges less on RBI intervention and more on global macro forces. Elevated oil prices, with Brent already up sharply since the conflict began, threaten to deepen external imbalances for the world’s third-largest crude importer. Additional risks include declining remittances from the Gulf and continued foreign portfolio outflows, which hit a record $12 billion in March.
Even if geopolitical tensions ease, analysts remain cautious. Structural pressures, including weak capital inflows and global trade uncertainties, suggest the rupee may continue to underperform its Asian peers.
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