The Indian Rupee (INR) opens on a flat note against the US Dollar (USD) on Thursday, with the USD/INR pair wobbling around 90.80. Investors anticipated a flat opening amid expectations that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) could intervene again to support the Indian Rupee.
There is a “high probability” that the central bank may step in again today, traders said, Reuters reported.
On Wednesday, the RBI sold US Dollars aggressively in both spot and non-deliverable forward (NDF) markets to halt the one-way rally in the pair when it hit record highs at 91.55.
The Indian Rupee has been underperforming the US Dollar for a long period, as foreign investors are consistently offloading their stake in the Indian stock market due to the United States (US)- India trade stalemate. This month, Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) remained net sellers on all trading days, but have surprisingly turned out to be net buyers on Wednesday. The net purchase by FIIs on Wednesday was Rs. 1,171.71 crore worth of shares.
A sudden halt in FIIs’ selling in the Indian equity market might boost risk sentiment; however, the impact would remain short-lived amid the absence of a US-India trade deal announcement.

In the daily chart, USD/INR trades at 90.7840. The pair holds above a rising 20-day EMA at 90.2106, preserving an upward bias. The average continues to slope higher, keeping pullbacks contained. RSI at 63.40 stays in bullish territory after easing from overbought, confirming firm momentum.
Bulls retain control while daily closes remain above the 20-day EMA, with dips expected to find support in that band. RSI edging higher in the mid-60s favors trend extension; a reversal toward 50 would weaken the impulse. A decisive break below the moving average would turn the bias neutral and open a deeper retracement.
Leave A Comment