RBI bought $2.47 bn post-yuan revaluation

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| "We believe that the entire buying would have been after July 21, when the yuan revaluation was announced," a senior dealer at a US bank here said. "They (RBI) had not been buying before that and whatever demand was there it was genuine corporate demand." |
| On July 21, China scrapped the yuan's peg to the greenback and revalued the exchange rate by 2.1 per cent to 8.11 yuan per $1 from 8.28 yuan. |
| The rupee, which had been moving around Rs 43.50 per $1 before the yuan revaluation, rose to a 6-year high of Rs 43.15 per $1 following the surprise announcement. But the rupee gave up its gains over the next few days because of continued dollar buying by the RBI through some state-owned banks. |
| The central bank's purchases were aimed at tempering the volatility in the rupee's exchange rate and as a steep rise in the currency would hurt exports. |
| According to dealers, central banks across Asia had intervened to prevent a sharp appreciation in their currencies. South Korea, Malaysia, and Turkey also resorted to dollar purchases. |
| Back home, RBI's dollar buys lifted the country's foreign exchange reserves to $140.6 billion as on July 29, compared with $137.5 billion previous week. |
| Before July, the RBI had bought dollars in March to the tune of $6.03 billion. In June, they had sold $103.6 million. |
First Published: Sep 15 2005 | 12:00 AM IST