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'Govt Not Losing Sleep Over Falling Rupee Against Dollar': CEA Nageswaran As INR Hits Record Low

'Govt Not Losing Sleep Over Falling Rupee Against Dollar': CEA Nageswaran As INR Hits Record Low
CEA Nageswaran said rupee will likely improve against US dollar next year. (Image: NDTV Profit)
  • Chief Economic Adviser says government is not worried about rupee breaching 90 against dollar
  • Rupee fell 5% in 2025 due to foreign fund outflows and strong dollar demand
  • No major impact on inflation or exports from rupee depreciation, says CEA
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Chief Economic Adviser V Anantha Nageswaran on Wednesday said the government is not losing sleep over declining rupee, which has breached the 90-level against the greenback. The falling rupee is not affecting inflation or exports, said CEA Nageswaran at a CII event on Wednesday.

However, he expressed hope that it should improve and 'come back' next year. The rupee has depreciated about 5% against the US dollar in 2025. The domestic currency plummeted to a new low of 90.30 against the dollar in the intra-day session on Dec. 3, falling 34 paise from its previous close, amid foreign fund outflows and sustained buying of dollars by banks.

Falling rupee helps outward shipment but makes imports costlier. Import-dependent sectors such as gems and jewellery, petroleum, and electronics may see lower benefits due to a rise in input costs, putting pressure on inflationary expectations.

Rupee Breaches 90-Mark: What's dragging INR?

A decline in the domestic equity markets and the absence of an India-US trade deal put further pressure on the local unit, according to forex traders. Market experts see significant possible movement for the currency in the short term. Some analysts have cited 90.5 against the next important level for the rupee, while others even see it nearing 92 levels in case there is no early settlement of India-US trade uncertainties.

"The Indian rupee weakened to a fresh record low due to strong demand for the US dollar, pressure from FII outflows, and weak global risk sentiment. The US dollar has been strengthening mainly because of higher US interest rates, which has shifted investor preference toward dollar assets," said Swapnil Aggarwal, Director, VSRK Capital.

At the same time, domestic factors have added to the pressure as oil companies and importers increased their dollar buying, further impacting the rupee's movement. Together, these factors have created a supply-demand imbalance in the foreign exchange market, leading to depreciation pressures on the local currency, according to analysts.

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