The rupee firm and quiet
By Geeta Parthip | 21 Aug 2004
The rupee opened firmer at 46.29 against the dollar probably reflecting the confidence in RBI support for the currency. Mumbai markets were closed for Parsi New Year on Friday and thus the trading volumes were low. Today being Saturday and no major releases expected the trading was quiet.
There
is a lurking fear that oil will touch a high of $50
per barrel which might see some action and movement
in the market. Most currencies are becoming more and
more immune to the same though.
The dollar strengthened against the euro in lifeless
trading throughout the London and US trading session.
The dollar is simply coming off extremely oversold conditions
against the euro. No news is good news for the dollar,
since there is no compelling reason for the euro to
break out of its current range.
The lack of significant US economic data until Wednesday
next week will encourage optimists to step in once again
and put a bit of downward pressure on the euro. Meanwhile,
there were three pieces of economic data released from
the Eurozone yesterday - French GDP, French current
account and Eurozone trade data. France's Q2 GDP was
confirmed at 0.8 per cent, while the current account
deficit narrowed from (-) EUR 729 million to (-) EUR
512 million in June. The Eurozone's trade surplus narrowed
from EUR 7799 million to EUR 8710 million, while the
current account surplus became a deficit of (-) EUR
500 million in the same month. The most important release
next week from Eurozone is the German IFO Survey of
Business sentiment due out on Thursday.
The British pound gave back everything it gained, as
range trading remained the predominant theme against
the dollar. The most important releases next week from
the UK are the second release of Q2 GDP and the Gfk
consumer confidence survey, both of which are due out
on Friday. So far, sentiment in the UK has been negative
for the last six months. There is no reason for a divergence
from the current trend.
The yen has strengthened against the dollar. The extended gains were helped by a stronger than expected tertiary industry index, which reported increased activity in the month of June. Yen has now become interestingly immune to the oil hikes owing to the statement made by Takenaka, the Japanese commerce minister saying the oil hike is a temporary feature and will not affect the yen in the long run. Though, oil is slowing creeping towards $50/barrel, the yen continues to strengthen. In the week ahead, there is a lot of significant Japanese economic data, including trade data, worker's spending and inflation.
Latest articles
Featured articles
The decoupling paradox: Why Wall Street keeps funding AI despite $100 oil
By Axel Miller | 11 May 2026
AI infrastructure stocks continue rallying despite $100 oil as investors bet on productivity gains and semiconductor demand in 2026.
Hybrid bonding gains attention as AI chip packaging demand grows
By Cygnus | 23 Apr 2026
Hybrid bonding is driving AI chip packaging demand as backend technologies gain importance in the semiconductor supply chain.
The agentic transition: how enterprises are scaling AI from pilot to profit
By Cygnus | 22 Apr 2026
AI has entered its execution era. Discover how companies like Valeo and Microsoft are scaling agentic AI systems—from copilots to autonomous workflows driving real business impact.
Post-splashdown: What Artemis II taught us about the ‘deep space wall’
By Axel Miller | 15 Apr 2026
Artemis II splashdown marks a breakthrough in deep space exploration. Discover AVATAR radiation data, Orion’s distance record, and insights shaping NASA’s 2028 Moon mission.
Can aviation go green? The multi-billion dollar race for sustainable fuel
By Cygnus | 10 Apr 2026
Airlines are racing to adopt sustainable aviation fuel, but limited supply and high costs challenge the future of green aviation.
The battery race: who will control the future of electric vehicles?
By Axel Miller | 08 Apr 2026
The global battery race is reshaping the electric vehicle industry, with China, the US, and Europe competing for control over supply chains and technology.
AI vs governments: Who controls the future of intelligence?
By Cygnus | 07 Apr 2026
Governments and AI companies like OpenAI and Anthropic are shaping the future of intelligence amid rising policy conflicts and global competition.
Strait of Hormuz: how one chokepoint controls the global economy
By Axel Miller | 06 Apr 2026
The Strait of Hormuz is a critical global chokepoint. Learn how disruptions impact oil prices, shipping, and the global economy.
The $2 trillion AI infrastructure race: Who will control global compute?
By Cygnus | 06 Apr 2026
AI spending is set to exceed $2 trillion in 2026, driving a global race in data centers, chips, and energy infrastructure.


