Rupee Continues Record Decline
2025-12-15 04:58
By
Joshua Ferrer
1 min. read
The Indian rupee slid past 90.6 per dollar, continuing to set fresh record lows, pressured by the absence of a US trade deal amid prolonged negotiations and persistent foreign outflows from local equities and bonds.
The currency has fallen 5.5% this year, making it Asia’s worst performer, as steep US tariffs have weighed on exports and dulled foreign appetite for Indian assets.
Overseas investors have offloaded more than $18 billion in stocks so far in 2025, with over $500 million in bond sales in December alone.
While India’s trade deficit narrowed in November as exports climbed to their highest level in nearly three and a half years, gains were limited by the ongoing impact of 50% US tariffs.
Investor sentiment has also been dampened by comments suggesting a US trade agreement is unlikely before March, alongside stalled talks with the EU.
Meanwhile, November inflation edged up to 0.71%, still well below the RBI’s 2% lower threshold, leaving room for potential rate cuts in 2026.