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INDIA RUPEE - Rupee under pressure, high oil prices encourage importer hedging and dampen flows

The Indian rupee will continue to be under pressure on Monday due to importer hedging and a demand spurred by high oil prices.

After settling at 94.2475 last Friday, traders expect the rupee to open between 94.26 and 94.30.

Last week, the currency fell by 1.42%. This was its worst performance in over three and a half years.

The fall was caused by a number of factors including the sharp rise in oil price amid the?absence of any sign of a solution to the disruptions around Strait of Hormuz? and the partial rollback of the central bank's measures that supported the rupee.

These factors are likely to continue to weigh on the currency, traders said. Oil prices have played a larger?role in this trend, which has been going on for several weeks.

Brent crude rose to just shy of $108 per barrel on Monday. This is the highest price in three weeks and extends last week's 16.5% rise.

The U.S. and Iran have stalled their peace talks, and the shipments of oil through the Strait of Hormuz remain limited. This has led to a tightening of supplies and a rise in prices.

A currency trader from a private sector bank stated that the rupee is not likely to benefit much at these prices.

He added that high oil prices force importers to hedge, capital flows remain low, and exporters do not see any reason to increase dollar sales.

The?outflows of foreign equity have not reversed despite recent easings in the selling by foreign investors. Lack of portfolio 'inflows', coupled with the prospect of increased oil import costs, are adding to rupee woes.

Foreign?investors outflows of Indian equities have slowed this month to just over $5 billion from more than $12.5 billion last March.

Traders have noted that despite the slowdown in flows, the rupee continues to be under pressure.

(source: Reuters)