Indian Rupee Slips on Hedging and Equity Outflows
2026-02-16 05:32
By
Erika Ordonez
1 min. read
The Indian rupee slipped to around 90.7 per dollar, retreating from the previous session, pressured by importer hedging and weak domestic equities.
Persistent dollar demand from importers covering obligations at lower rupee levels added immediate buying pressure.
At the same time, weak domestic equities and erratic foreign flows, including over $800 million of equity sales on Friday, limited any post-US-India trade deal recovery and reinforced rupee weakness.
The currency also tracked weaker Asian peers amid a broader risk-off mood ahead of key US data.
Last week’s surprise RBI intervention, supported by dollar sales from state-run banks, helped signal a preferred trading range near 91 and cap further losses, though one-time dollar payments and ongoing hedging activity kept the currency under strain.
The lack of follow-through after intervention underscores that selling pressure persists.
Traders expect the rupee to remain supported near 90.60–90.65, with resistance around 91.