<p>The Indian rupee, which has fallen 7 per cent since the start of the financial year to 81.26 against the dollar on Monday, will depreciate further by the end of March 2023, according to a majority of the analysts and economists polled by DH.</p>.<p>Nine out of the 13 poll participants said they expected the rupee to fall further due to a host of reasons including the strengthening of the greenback, a rise in global commodity prices and inflation in Asia’s third-largest economy. According to the least optimistic estimate, the rupee could breach the 84-mark against the dollar by the end of the financial year.</p>.<p>The US dollar rose against the euro and yen on Monday, as investors kept their focus on the Federal Reserve's interest rate hiking path after a policymaker said too much was being made of last week's cooler US inflation data, Reuters reported.</p>.<p>The US economy has been coping with four-decade high inflation, prompting the Fed to increase the benchmark lending rate periodically, from near zero in March 2022 to 3.75 per cent - 4 per cent in November 2022. </p>.<p>“Amid the ultra-hawkish stance of the US central bank and the rapid pace of interest rate hikes to battle widespread inflationary pressures and concerns about a global economic downturn, we have witnessed safe haven flows into the dollar as a hedge against potential risks,” said Sugandha Sachdeva, vice president for commodity and currency research at Religare Broking.</p>.<p>The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of major currencies, touched its highest level in two decades this year.</p>.<p>Eight out of the 13 poll participants listed a spike in the prices of global commodities, especially crude oil, as another significant contributing factor.</p>.<p>“The key reason in (the) early part of the year was the spike in oil prices due to (the) Russia-Ukraine war alongside a worsening trade balance” said Dhiraj Nim, who is a foreign exchange strategist at ANZ Research.</p>.<p>India, which is the world’s third-largest oil importer, has seen its current account deficit (CAD) widen on account of high import bills. </p>.<p>“The CAD of India is sharply increasing with (the) latest figure coming at $23.90 billion for the first quarter of fiscal year 2022-23,” adding that it stands at 2.8 per cent of the GDP which is the highest in four years and extremely close to the 3 per cent red line, according to Riya Singh, Senior Research Analyst (currency) at Nirmal Bang Securities.</p>.<p>30 per cent of those polled blamed high inflation at home as one of the key reasons. India's retail inflation eased to a three-month low of 6.77 per cent in October, but was still above the Reserve Bank of India’s tolerance range of 2 - 6 per cent.</p>.<p>"RBI has been less hawkish than other major central banks but concern over higher inflation continues to disturb the overall market sentiment," said Gaurang Somaiya, a forex and bullion analyst at Motilal Oswal Financial Services.</p>.<p>A further rise in crude oil prices on the back of escalating geopolitical conflicts appeared to be the overriding concern, moving forward. </p>.<p>"If oil prices inch up above $100-$120/barrel, it will put pressure on India’s already precarious external position and hence will be detrimental for the rupee," said Aditi Gupta, an economist at the Bank of Baroda.</p>.<p>The next big trigger for the rupee will be the meetings of the US and Indian central banks in December, the analysts told DH.</p>
<p>The Indian rupee, which has fallen 7 per cent since the start of the financial year to 81.26 against the dollar on Monday, will depreciate further by the end of March 2023, according to a majority of the analysts and economists polled by DH.</p>.<p>Nine out of the 13 poll participants said they expected the rupee to fall further due to a host of reasons including the strengthening of the greenback, a rise in global commodity prices and inflation in Asia’s third-largest economy. According to the least optimistic estimate, the rupee could breach the 84-mark against the dollar by the end of the financial year.</p>.<p>The US dollar rose against the euro and yen on Monday, as investors kept their focus on the Federal Reserve's interest rate hiking path after a policymaker said too much was being made of last week's cooler US inflation data, Reuters reported.</p>.<p>The US economy has been coping with four-decade high inflation, prompting the Fed to increase the benchmark lending rate periodically, from near zero in March 2022 to 3.75 per cent - 4 per cent in November 2022. </p>.<p>“Amid the ultra-hawkish stance of the US central bank and the rapid pace of interest rate hikes to battle widespread inflationary pressures and concerns about a global economic downturn, we have witnessed safe haven flows into the dollar as a hedge against potential risks,” said Sugandha Sachdeva, vice president for commodity and currency research at Religare Broking.</p>.<p>The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of major currencies, touched its highest level in two decades this year.</p>.<p>Eight out of the 13 poll participants listed a spike in the prices of global commodities, especially crude oil, as another significant contributing factor.</p>.<p>“The key reason in (the) early part of the year was the spike in oil prices due to (the) Russia-Ukraine war alongside a worsening trade balance” said Dhiraj Nim, who is a foreign exchange strategist at ANZ Research.</p>.<p>India, which is the world’s third-largest oil importer, has seen its current account deficit (CAD) widen on account of high import bills. </p>.<p>“The CAD of India is sharply increasing with (the) latest figure coming at $23.90 billion for the first quarter of fiscal year 2022-23,” adding that it stands at 2.8 per cent of the GDP which is the highest in four years and extremely close to the 3 per cent red line, according to Riya Singh, Senior Research Analyst (currency) at Nirmal Bang Securities.</p>.<p>30 per cent of those polled blamed high inflation at home as one of the key reasons. India's retail inflation eased to a three-month low of 6.77 per cent in October, but was still above the Reserve Bank of India’s tolerance range of 2 - 6 per cent.</p>.<p>"RBI has been less hawkish than other major central banks but concern over higher inflation continues to disturb the overall market sentiment," said Gaurang Somaiya, a forex and bullion analyst at Motilal Oswal Financial Services.</p>.<p>A further rise in crude oil prices on the back of escalating geopolitical conflicts appeared to be the overriding concern, moving forward. </p>.<p>"If oil prices inch up above $100-$120/barrel, it will put pressure on India’s already precarious external position and hence will be detrimental for the rupee," said Aditi Gupta, an economist at the Bank of Baroda.</p>.<p>The next big trigger for the rupee will be the meetings of the US and Indian central banks in December, the analysts told DH.</p>