The rupee closed modestly weaker on Wednesday as dollar demand from local corporates and on account of maturing positions in the non-deliverable forward (NDF) market blunted positive cues from gains in most regional peers. The rupee ended at 89.7850 per U.S. dollar, down about 0.1% on the day. Most Asian currencies edged higher but traders said local flow dynamics continued to dominate price action for the rupee, even though it has bounced back from the record-low levels hit last week. The maturity of positions in the NDF market also spurred dollar-buy bids at the daily reference rate, a trader at a Mumbai-based bank said. While price-action in the spot market was largely contained, dollar-rupee forward premiums declined sharply after the Reserve Bank of India announced it will conduct a 3-year $10 billion FX swap next month. The 1-month dollar rupee forward premium fell nearly 15 paisa and the 3-year forward premium was down over 50 paisa. The Japanese yen gained modestly against the U.S. dollar on Wednesday as traders focused on whether weakness in the Japanese currency will prompt officials in the country to intervene. Volumes are light ahead of Thursday’s Christmas Day holiday, when U.S. and many international markets will be closed. The Japanese currency was last up 0.25% on the day against the U.S. dollar at 155.84 per dollar. The dollar reached 157.77 yen on Friday. The dollar was otherwise mixed. The dollar index , which measures it against a basket of other currencies, including the yen and the euro, rose 0.07% to 97.96, with the euro down 0.14% at $1.1778. Sterling weakened 0.13% to $1.3498. The Australian dollar strengthened 0.07% to $0.6705 and the Canadian dollar gained 0.11% to C$1.367 per U.S. dollar. The U.S. currency has fallen this year as the Federal Reserve cuts rates, with more easing expected next year while analysts expect other central banks to have completed their rate reductions. Oil settled marginally lower on Wednesday, and prices were on course for their steepest annual decline since 2020 as investors weighed U.S. economic growth and assessed the risk of supply disruptions from Venezuela and Russia. Brent crude futures closed down 14 cents, or 0.2%, at $62.24 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude eased 3 cents, or 0.05%, to $58.29......
More