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Ebbing hopes of an imminent resolution to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran have lifted oil prices to the vicinity of $100 per barrel, keeping alive investor worries over the risks confronting energy importers like India.
On the day, the rupee was down 0.1 per cent at 95.7675 per dollar, with trading in Asia thinned out by a clutch of regional holidays.
The dollar held gains from the previous session after Iran said the U.S. had violated a ceasefire, potentially complicating efforts to bring the three-month-long war to a close.
The worries could complicate the rupee's nascent recovery, sparked by firm central bank interventions that had shored up the currency from its record low of nearly 97 per dollar.
"The rupee has started moving like a shadow of Brent crude — reacting almost instantly to every rise and fall in energy prices," said Amit Pabari, managing director at FX advisory firm CR Forex.
"Technically, the 96.20–96.40 zone is expected to remain a strong resistance area for USD/INR."
Meanwhile, dollar-rupee forward premiums dropped on Wednesday, with the 1-year implied yield down 8 bps at 3.23%.
"It seems like the market got ahead of itself in pricing rate hikes by the RBI and that is being trimmed now in the swaps market," a trader at a foreign bank said.
The 1-year overnight index swap rate, a gauge of future policy expectations, was last at 6.13 per cent, down 17 bps over the week so far. India's central bank is slated to announce its policy decision on June 5.
Published on May 27, 2026
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