
Indian Rupee Hits Lowest Intraday Level Against US Dollar, Reaches 95.80
Indian Rupee Hits Record Low Amid Ongoing US-Iran Conflict
The Indian rupee has fallen to a fresh record low on Wednesday, 13 May, extending its decline as overseas debt repayments and importer hedging demand outweighed the limited support from higher duties on precious metal imports. The currency touched an all-time low of 95.80 against the US dollar, weakening by nearly 30 paise from the day's high. The rupee ended today at a record low of 95.71 per dollar, down from 95.63 in Monday's session.
Persistent pressure from rising energy prices amid the US-Iran conflict has further strained India's macroeconomic outlook. Economists have responded by trimming growth forecasts, raising inflation projections, and cautioning that the rupee could remain under sustained pressure in the near term. The rupee opened slightly higher by 2 paise at 95.61 against the US dollar on Wednesday, 13 May, bolstered by recent tariff hikes. However, the gains are limited by elevated oil prices and rising US inflation.
India has raised tariffs on precious metals from 6% to 15% to ease pressure on the currency, which has been affected by rising crude prices linked to the ongoing conflict in Iran. Since the conflict began on 28 February, Brent crude prices have surged by nearly 50%, resulting in a more than 5% depreciation of the rupee. In response to this situation, Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently called for measures to conserve foreign exchange reserves. The government has also increased import duties on gold and silver to curb demand and support the currency.
Read also: Treasury Yields Experience Largest Increase in Two Weeks Following Release of Labor Market Data
Globally, markets remained cautious. Currency markets were largely stable, while technology-focused equities rose as optimism surrounding artificial intelligence outweighed concerns about geopolitical tensions and persistent US inflation.
Rupee Outlook Comparison
| Entity | Rupee Value (May 13) | Change from Monday (May 12) |
|---|---|---|
| US Dollar (High) | 95.80 | -30 paise |
| US Dollar (Low) | 95.71 | -8 paise |
| US Dollar (Open) | 95.61 | +2 paise |
Khushi Mistry, Research Analyst at Bonanza, said the rupee's weakness is being driven primarily by elevated crude oil prices (which account for ~22% of imports), FII/FPI outflows, interest rate differentials with the US, and broader dollar strength. She noted that while gold imports—nearly 11% of India's total imports—do contribute to the external imbalance, curtailing them can offer only marginal relief. The recent duty hike is likely to reduce official gold imports in the short term and help trim the current account deficit, thereby slightly easing pressure on the rupee.
Read also: US-Iran Tensions Spark Uptick in Oil Prices Amid Global Market Decline
However, she cautioned that the move alone is unlikely to reverse the currency's decline. If pressure persists, the government may need to supplement it with additional measures, including RBI intervention and steps to support capital inflows.
According to Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money, USD/INR is trading near the ₹95.60 level, close to the top end of the ascending trendline. Immediate resistance stands at yesterday's high near ₹95.75; a sustained move above this level could extend momentum, hitting the ₹96 mark for the first time, with the possibility of ₹96.30–₹96.50 coming into focus.
"On the downside, ₹95.30 acts as immediate support; a break below this level could trigger a pullback toward ₹95–₹94.70. The near-term bias remains cautiously bullish, driven by persistent dollar demand amid ongoing geopolitical tensions, unless the central bank intervenes," said Ponmudi.
Investor Takeaway
Investors should be cautious of the Indian rupee's decline and potential impact on the country's macroeconomic outlook.
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