Rupee breaches 89-per-dollar mark, may stay under pressure
As the Indian currency breaches the psychologically important level, economists see pressure continuing and the long-pending US-India trade deal providing only limited relief


The rupee has breached the 89-per-dollar mark for the first time, and economists say the currency’s weakness is far from over. Even if New Delhi finally seals the long-pending trade agreement with Washington—a deal the markets have been waiting on for weeks—the lift to the rupee will likely be temporary. The structural forces at play are deeper, and the central bank’s room to fight them is shrinking.
Gaura Sengupta, chief economist at IDFC First Bank, says: “A trade deal may give you some days of strength, but depreciation will resume after that.” Dhiraj Nim, economist and forex strategist at ANZ, echoes the view: “A favourable trade deal could ease pressure in the near term. But over the medium term the rupee should depreciate modestly to maintain [export] competitiveness.”
For weeks, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) aggressively defended the currency. The last major push came near 88.8, when the central bank pulled the rupee back below 88 to signal it would not tolerate speculative pressure. But on Friday, the RBI stepped aside, probably because of the “broad strength of the US dollar”, according to Nim.
“What changed on Friday was the broader global backdrop. Markets are now debating whether the Fed will cut rates in December, and the odds of a cut have been declining. This has strengthened the dollar, which may be why the RBI felt comfortable allowing the rupee to move past 89.” From here on, Nim expects the RBI to count on a favourable trade deal to ease pressure on the currency, potentially even pushing USD-INR lower.
The other two reasons for the rupee falling rupee are a slowdown in capital inflows and widening of the trade deficit, with gold imports being a major driver of the latter.
But for the economy, he says, it is not that turbulent. “A weaker exchange rate is unlikely to limit monetary policy scope as inflation is very low. It also means increased currency competitiveness, which is good for exports.”
The logic is straightforward: The global trade pie is possibly smaller now because of tariffs, which means competition for export market share is now more intense. “And since India does not export many high-tech, price-insensitive goods, exchange-rate competitiveness becomes an important policy tool. Therefore, the rupee should depreciate modestly over the medium term to maintain competitiveness.”
Sengupta points out that foreign portfolio flows have been weakening long before the latest volatility. Investors view Indian equity valuations as stretched, and the rupee’s depreciation erodes dollar returns further. Other emerging markets—particularly China—have seen a pickup in flows. India hasn’t.
The real drag is the capital account, not trade. “Our expectation is that the rupee may get some temporary relief if the India-US trade deal is announced—you might see it strengthen for a day or two—but we still expect depreciation to resume after that. The underlying problem is the weak capital account.”
First Published: Nov 22, 2025, 18:31
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