BUSINESS

Rupee ends steady after hitting 1-week high; oil firms buy dollars

By Swati Bhat
March 18, 2014

The rupee rose to a one-week high on Tuesday as shares surged to a record high, but erased most of the gains to end flat as oil importers rushed in to buy dollars once the local unit strengthened above 61 to the dollar.

The rupee is likely to be supported by strong foreign inflows that helped push up the BSE and Nifty indexes to record highs on Tuesday, but traders expect more narrow ranges given the lack of specific domestic triggers.

Global factors will also be key this week, ahead of the Federal Reserve's two-day meeting ending on Wednesday, continued political tensions in Ukraine, and a weakening yuan currency in China.

"There aren't any domestic data points so rupee should broadly hold in a 60.60 to 61.75 range with good demand

from oil firms being seen," said Hari Chandramgethen, head of foreign exchange trading at South Indian Bank.

"A breach of 60.60 on the downside for the pair can take it to 60.10 levels," he added.

The partially convertible rupee closed at 61.19/20 per dollar, unchanged from Friday. Financial markets were closed on Monday for a local holiday.

The rupee earlier rose to as high as 60.88 per dollar in early trade, its highest since March 11, as foreign investors continued to bolster blue chips in the lead-up to general elections.

Overseas funds were net buyers of $160.6 million worth of shares on Friday, marking their 20th net buying session in the previous 21, for a net total of $1.6 billion, exchange and regulatory data shows.

In the offshore non-deliverable forwards, the one-month contract was at 61.67 while the three-month was at 62.42.

Swati Bhat in Mumbai
Source: REUTERS
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