India’s boldest currency move in years brings brief rupee relief

India’s boldest currency move in years brings brief rupee relief


RBI flexibility falls as FX reserves drop in March to defend the rupee following the Iran conflict

Published Mon, Mar 30, 2026 · 03:49 PM

[MUMBAI] India’s most dramatic step in more than a decade to curb speculation in the foreign-exchange market delivered fleeting gains, with an initial jump in the rupee rapidly fading, reflecting the deep challenges the central bank faces in supporting Asia’s worst-performing currency.

After surging as much as 1.4 per cent at the Monday (Mar 30) open, the rupee quickly pared gains to just 0.3 per cent. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday said it will cap the open positions lenders can hold in the onshore currency market at US$100 million per day, forcing them to shrink their books.

The intervention underscores the RBI’s shrinking flexibility, as foreign-exchange reserves have shrunk in the first three weeks of March amid efforts to defend the rupee following the Iran conflict. The measure immediately drew pushback, with banks warning that unwinding positions totalling at least US$30 billion could lead to steep losses. They have requested the rule apply only to new bets, people familiar with the matter said earlier.

“Banks are running massive arbitrage positions, wherein they are short in the offshore market and long US dollar onshore,” said Abhishek Goenka, founder of IFA Global. Since the RBI’s limit applies only to onshore positions, banks are forced to trim those wagers, which require them to sell US dollars locally, he said.

Still, Monday’s move is unlikely to alter the broader outlook, given the still-elevated oil prices. India has been among the hardest hit by the Iran war and rising commodity costs, given its heavy reliance on energy imports. On Friday, the rupee weakened past the closely watched 94-per-US dollar mark to a fresh low.

The rupee has already given back much of Monday’s gain due to demand for the greenback from oil importers at lower levels, according to Anil Kumar Bhansali, head of treasury at Finrex Treasury Advisors.

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Brent prices are holding well above US$110 per barrel, far higher than the US$70 baseline assumed by the RBI in October. Bloomberg Economics estimates that crude at US$100 a barrel and gas prices 50 per cent above pre-war levels will raise India’s import bill by US$5 billion a month.

The RBI’s move may help the rupee in the near term “but history shows such actions have limited impact”, Systematix Institutional Equities analyst Siddharth Rajpurohit said in a note. “Pressure will likely continue if crude prices remain around US$100”, and warned that the brokerage’s target of 100 to a US dollar “may occur sooner than later”.

Bank stocks hit

Lenders’ shares fell in early trading, with State Bank of India and HDFC Bank sliding more than 2 per cent each. A gauge of bank stocks dropped by a similar extent, extending this month’s 15 per cent slide.

SEE ALSO

The data released by the Reserve Bank of India on Friday (Jan 30) showed that India's foreign exchange reserves rose by about US$8.1 billion to US$709.4 billion in the week ended Jan 23.

Every one rupee move in the local currency versus the US dollar could lead to a one-time loss of 30 billion to 40 billion rupees for banks, according to Jefferies analysts.

Prior to the RBI’s latest measure, banks were permitted to set the so-called open position limits within 25 per cent of their capital.

The rupee has fallen almost 4 per cent since the Iran war broke out and is Asia’s worst performer this year. Uncertainty over the duration of the conflict has prompted global funds to pull about US$12 billion from local shares, while index-eligible bonds have seen record outflows of US$1.6 billion in March. BLOOMBERG

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Liam Redmond

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