Foreign fund outflows, crude oil rally weigh on Indian currency; equities also under pressure
Mumbai | Economy India Desk: The Indian rupee weakened sharply in early trade on Friday, depreciating 23 paise to 89.94 against the US dollar, driven by sustained foreign fund outflows, a rebound in global crude oil prices, and weakening domestic market sentiment.
At the interbank foreign exchange, the local unit opened at 89.84 against the greenback, but soon lost traction to trade at 89.94, marking a notable slide from its previous closing level.
Market Drivers: What Weighed on the Rupee
According to forex traders and market analysts, several factors contributed to the rupee’s decline:
- Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) pulling funds from Indian markets, leading to higher demand for dollars
- Rising crude oil prices, which increase India’s import bill and widen the trade deficit
- Negative trend in domestic equities, dampening risk appetite among investors
- Dollar demand from importers, especially ahead of year-end settlements
- Uncertainty around global trade deals and macroeconomic cues
These combined forces shifted demand toward the US currency, placing downward pressure on the Indian unit.
Crude Oil Recovery Adds Pressure
Global crude benchmarks recovered in early Asian trading sessions on Friday, reducing some of the recent pressure on energy markets but inadvertently strengthening the dollar’s appeal as a safe-haven currency. As India is a net importer of oil, higher crude prices typically weigh on the rupee by expanding the import bill and increasing demand for dollars to settle energy purchases.

Equity Markets React
Domestic equity markets also reflected jitters, with benchmark indices showing weakness in early trade. Analysts linked the selloff to global cues, funds moving to safer assets, and cautious outlooks ahead of year-end macroeconomic data releases.
Market experts remind investors that currency and equity volatility often reinforce each other, particularly when driven by external demand–supply shifts and cross-border capital flows.
Looking Ahead
With the rupee near the 90-per-dollar psychological mark, analysts will be watching:
- FII flows into Indian markets
- Crude price momentum
- Global monetary policy signals
- Trade and geopolitical developments
These factors are likely to influence the currency trajectory as India enters the final trading sessions of the year.
Economy India View
The early slide in the rupee underscores the sensitivity of emerging market currencies like the Indian rupee to global financial flows, commodity price dynamics, and investor sentiment. As the currency markets remain volatile, policy rates, external sector data, and inflation trends will also play key roles in shaping the near-term outlook.
(Economy India)






