Rupee dips lower
By Geeta Parthip | 30 Jul 2004
The rupee dipped low to 46.50 levels before it was rescued by the RBI and the state banks. Rupee has opened weak at 46.49/50. The positive sentiment of a bullish dollar is ruling the market and weighing on the rupee. The recent good US data has kept the dollar on a high road.
The month end demand for dollar by importers has also been steady and is adding pressure on our currency. With the global interest rates expected to look up routing FDI into India will become quite a task.
The global oil prices that have been soaring, have reached a 21-yr high mark on this Wednesday. Fear of further hikes is also yielding to the bullish dollar sentiment.
The rupee watchers will watch out for the US GDP data or any other economic data to be released to capitalise the dollar upsurge knowing that the RBI will be bringing the rupee back in the range, such happenings are ideal for day spot traders.
The Japanese yen is regaining its losses against the dollar and has retraced itself to 111.35 levels. The yen went weak after the significantly weaker industrial production (IP) report for the month of June. This has been attributed to poor retail sales in the US that have caused some concern for companies such as Sony and other electronic giants in Japan.
Euro opened at 1.2020 levels and then the dollar went to 1.1990 corrected to 1.2058 levels ranging in 1.2050 levels this was more due to some terrorism related news as nothing came on the economic front.
The pound at 1.854 levels retraced from 1.8100 levels shows weakening reflecting the fall in mortgage approvals and a miniscule rise in consumer confidence according to the Gfk report. There is no doubt that the Bank of England needs to act to prevent a slowing from becoming a bubble burst.
Latest articles
Featured articles
Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains
By Cygnus | 06 Feb 2026
Intel and AMD server CPU shortages are hitting China as AI data center demand surges, pushing lead times to six months and driving prices higher.
Budget 2026-27 Seeks Fiscal Balance Amid Rupee Volatility and Industrial Stagnation
By Cygnus | 02 Feb 2026
India's Budget 2026-27 targets fiscal discipline with record capex as markets tumble, the rupee weakens and manufacturing struggles to regain momentum.
The Thirsty Cloud: Why 2026 Is the Year AI Bottlenecks Shift From Chips to Water
By Axel Miller | 28 Jan 2026
As AI server density surges in 2026, data centers face a new bottleneck deeper than chips — the massive water demand required for cooling next-generation infrastructure.
The New Airspace Economy: How Geopolitics Is Rewriting Aviation Costs in 2026
By Axel Miller | 22 Jan 2026
Airspace bans, sanctions and corridor risk are forcing airlines into costly detours in 2026, raising fuel burn, reducing aircraft utilisation and pushing airfares higher worldwide.
India’s Data Center Arms Race: The Battle for Power, Cooling, and AI Real Estate
By Cygnus | 22 Jan 2026
India’s data centre boom is turning into an AI arms race where power contracts, liquid cooling and fast commissioning decide the winners across Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad.
India’s Oil Balancing Act: Refiners Rebuild Middle East Supply Lines as Russia Flows Disrupt
By Axel Miller | 21 Jan 2026
India’s refiners are rebalancing crude sourcing as Russian imports fell to a two-year low in December 2025, lifting OPEC’s share and raising geopolitical risk concerns.
Arctic Fever: How ‘Greenland Tariff’ Politics Sparked a Global Flight to Safety
By Axel Miller | 20 Jan 2026
Greenland-linked tariff threats have injected fresh uncertainty into transatlantic trade, triggering a risk-off shift in markets and reshaping global supply chain planning.
The New Oil (Part 5): Friend-Shoring, Supply Chain Fragmentation and the Cost of Resilience
By Cygnus | 19 Jan 2026
Friend-shoring is reshaping lithium, rare earth and graphite supply chains, creating a resilience premium and new winners and losers in clean tech.
The New Oil (Part 4): Can Technology Break the Dependency?
By Cygnus | 16 Jan 2026
Can magnet recycling and rare-earth-free motors reduce global dependence on strategic minerals? Part 4 explores breakthroughs, limits and timelines.

