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MUMBAI: The rupee gained for a fourth consecutive session on Wednesday to touch a new five-month high as companies and custodian banks sold dollars, with dealers expecting more such sales in coming sessions.
The gains has been largely driven by foreign fund inflows into rallying local equities, which received over $3.5 b illion i n net purchases last month.
Custodian banks were heavy buyers of rupees on behalf of foreign institutional investors, while dealers also cited inflows from a state-run utility, an IT company, as well as a financial services firm that recently sold a stake in one of its businesses.
However, the rupee is already in overbought zone, as per 14-day relative strength index, technical charts showed.
"The rupee is being driven by inflows, and I expect it to test 52 to a dollar," said N.S. Venkatesh, treasurer at IDBI BankBSE 1.91 %.
"I expect inflows to continue for the next 1-2 weeks." The partially convertible rupee closed at 52.155/165, as per State Bank of IndiaBSE 1.15 % closing rate
from Monday's close of 52.40/41. It rose to an intraday high of 52.13, its highest since April 23.
The market was shut on Tuesday for a national holiday. The local currency was also helped by a steadier euro , on hopes Spain will eventually request financial aid and thus soothe concerns around the biggest hotspot in the euro zone's debt crisis.
$/INR 1-month non-deliverable forwards were last trading at 52.41.
In the currency futures market, the most-traded near-month dollar/rupee contracts on the National Stock Exchange, the MCX-SX and the United Stock Exchange all closed at around 52.45 with a total traded volume of around $6 billion.
Rupee hits 5-month high as foreign inflows rally continues - The Economic Times
Rupee at 51, CAD 3.5%: Goldman Sachs
Mumbai: American investment bank and leading brokerage house Goldman Sachs today said it sees the current rally in rupee to continue with the currency closing the year at 51 to the dollar.
It pegged the CAD at 3.5 percent for the fiscal.
"We remain positive on the rupee due to an improving CAD (current account deficit) and greater capital inflows, in part due to the recent reform efforts by the government, as well as the global easing of liquidity. We maintain our 12-month rupee target at 51 to the dollar," Goldman said in a note today.
Stating that CAD had peaked last fiscal, it said, "We continue to maintain our earlier forecast that the CAD may have peaked in FY12, and will likely trend down due to the sharp rupee fall. We expect the FY13 CAD at 3.5 percent of GDP, down from 4.2 percent in FY12."
Rupee at 51, CAD 3.5%: Goldman Sachs
Even the euro is trading at around 1.30 from 1.20.
Even though Europe is in an economic depression.
It's not about euro strength, but dollar weakness.
India is in recession, all the data are weak.
Surveys like PMI are a poor measure because its based on opinion, not facts.