- The Indian Rupee falls back against the US Dollar as FIIs continue to dump Indian equities.
- US President Trump confirms a US-EU trade deal.
- Investors expect the Fed to leave interest rates steady on Wednesday.
The Indian Rupee (INR) resums its downside journey against the US Dollar (USD) on Monday after a positive opening. The USD/INR pair rebounds to near 86.70 as Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) continue to pare stakes in Indian equities. a scenario that is unfavorable for the Indian Rupee.
On Friday, FIIs sold Rs. 1,979.96 crores worth of shares in the Indian equity market. So far, FIIs have pared stakes in Indian markets worth Rs. 30,508.66 crores.
Meanwhile, the US Dollar trades sideways even as the United States (US) and the European Union (EU) have reached a trade framework ahead of the August 1 tariff deadline over the weekend to avert a damaging trade war.
At the time of writing, the US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback’s value against six major currencies, flattens around 97.60.
In Monday’s session, the Indian Rupee will be influenced by the Industrial and Manufacturing Output data for June, which will be published at 10:30 GMT. The Industrial Output is estimated to have grown at a faster pace of 2.4%, compared to the prior reading of 1.2%.
Daily digest market movers: Indian Rupee resumes downside journey against US Dollar
- According to the US-EU trade pact, Washington will receive 15% tariffs on all imports from Brussels, a number is lower than 30% that was threatened by President Donald Trump in the mid of this month. Still, the duty rate is higher than the zero-for-zero tariff proposed earlier by EU officials. Trade terms between the two are majorly similar to what Washington agreed with Japan last week.
- The confirmation of the US-EU trade pact has undermined the uncertainty surrounding the August 1 tariff deadline as Washington has closed deals with its key trading partners, except its North American peers.
- The scenario of the US-EU trade deal should be favorable for the US Dollar. However, it struggles to attract bids as US President Trump has expressed confidence that Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Jerome Powell could lower interest rates soon.
- “We had a very good meeting, I think we had a very good meeting on interest rates,” Trump told reporters on Friday, Reuters reported. Such a scenario is unfavorable for the US Dollar as interest rate cuts by the Fed will increase the supply of Greenback into the economy.
- For fresh cues on the interest rate outlook, investors await the Fed’s monetary policy meeting, which is scheduled for Wednesday. According to the CME FedWatch tool, the Fed is certain to leave interest rates in the current range of 4.25%-4.50%. The commentary from Fed’s Powell will provide more color about his meeting with President Trump.
- This week, investors will also focus on an array of US economic data, including Personal Consumption Expenditure Price Index (PCE) and JOLTS Job Openings data for June, flash Q2 Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and the ISM Manufacturing PMI data for July.
- Meanwhile, investors also await high-stakes trade talks between the US and China in Stockholm, which will start from Monday.
- According to the South China Morning Post (SCMP), Washington and Beijing are expected to extend their tariff truce for 90 days, which will expire on August 12.
Technical Analysis: USD/INR trades firmly near monthly high of 86.80
USD/INR demonstrates strength near a fresh monthly high near 86.80 at the start of the week. The near-term trend of the pair remains bullish as the 20-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) slopes higher around 86.25.
The 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) broke above 60.00. A fresh bullish momentum would emerge if the RSI holds above that level.
Looking down, the 20-day EMA near 86.40 will act as key support for the major. On the upside, the June 23 high near 87.00 will be a critical hurdle for the pair.