Rupee hits record low of 96/$ as oil surge fans economic worries

Rupee weakened ​to
an all-time low on Friday, as oil prices neared $110 per ‌barrel,
intensifying economic challenges for the world’s third-biggest
crude importer, ​with strains emerging in key indicators.

The rupee ⁠fell 0.4% to 96.1350 per U.S. dollar,
eclipsing its previous all-time low of 95.9575 hit in the
previous session.

The rupee ended the session ‌at 95.9650, down 1.5%
week-on-week.

The currency has declined over 6% year-to-date and is Asia’s
worst-performing unit, battered by ‌persistent capital outflows
and worries over the balance of ‌payments ⁠strain as the Iran war
keeps energy prices ⁠on the boil.

Brent crude futures rose over 3% to $109 per barrel
on Friday, heightening worries over global inflation and sending
bond yields higher on rising ​expectations of interest rate ‌hikes
this year.

“The longer the conflict dragged on, the more the effects
would manifest in the form of higher inflation, weaker economic
growth, and a deterioration in external balances ‌especially for
large net energy importers,” Khoon Goh, head ​of Asia Research at
ANZ, said in a note.



“Central banks in the region might be forced ⁠to tighten
policy in response to the inflation shock as well as to
stabilise exchange rates,” the note said.

Asian currencies were ‌down between 0.3% and 0.8%, while
regional stocks slumped more than 2%.

DATA SIGNAL STRAIN

Data on Friday showed that India’s merchandise trade deficit
widened to $28.38 billion in April, as the Middle
East conflict hindered shipments and disrupted energy imports,
making them costlier. India imports more than 80% of its crude
oil ‌needs and 60% of its cooking gas.

The trade data followed ​figures showing India’s wholesale
inflation quickened to a three-and-a-half-year high in April.

Following modest retail fuel price hikes ⁠on Friday,
economists at Goldman Sachs expect India’s consumer inflation to
average ⁠around 4% in May and forecast two 25-basis-point rate
hikes in October and December.

India’s 10-year bond yield ‌rose to an over five-week high of
7.07%, up 9 bps this week, while the benchmark equity index
Nifty ​50 declined over 2% week-on-week.

Source

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