The rupee slumped to near a record low on Tuesday on doubts about the government's latest plan to narrow the current account deficit, deepening concerns about the economy and fears of more foreign capital outflows.
India's finance minister announced a slew of measures on Monday in a bid to relieve some of the grinding pressure on the currency, focusing on curbing imports and raising money abroad.
The Indian rupee trimmed some of its initial losses against the American currency but was quoted still down by 25 paise to 61.52 per dollar on good dollar demand from banks and importers on the back of higher dollar in overseas market.The rupee resumed at 61.39 per dollar as against the last closing level of 61.27 per dollar at the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) Market and dropped further to 61.66 per dollar on good dollar buying.
However, it recovered afterwards to quote at 61.52 per dollar at 1040hrs on some dollar selling by exporters in view of firm equity market.
It moved in a range of 61.39-61.66 per dollar during the morning deals.
But markets were highly sceptical the steps would arrest the rupee's decline, reflecting both increasingly weak economic fundamentals and expectations of further capital outflows from emerging markets if the Federal Reserve begins scaling back its stimulus measures in September as widely expected.
That raises prospects that the Reserve Bank of India will need to stick to its gambit of draining cash from the financial system longer than expected, risking further strains on the economy and, in turn, making it harder to attract vital foreign inflows.
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