“A stronger economy ultimately creates the conditions for a stronger currency — short-term intervention can slow depreciation, but only structural reform can reverse it.”
The Indian Rupee has been on one of its most sustained depreciation trajectories in recent memory. From approximately ₹83 per US Dollar in early 2024, the exchange rate crossed ₹85 in early 2025, breached ₹90 by mid-2025, hit a then-record low of ₹94.71 in March 2026, and touched ₹95 per dollar by May 2026 — a depreciation of roughly 14% over two years. The rupee lost approximately 5.5% against the dollar in 2025 alone, making it Asia’s worst-performing major currency for the year.
The slide reflects a convergence of structural domestic weaknesses and powerful external headwinds that have systematically outpaced the RBI’s defensive interventions. Understanding rupee weakness is directly relevant to macroeconomics, monetary policy, India’s external sector, and banking awareness — all high-weightage topics across competitive exams.
📜 Why Is the US Dollar So Dominant?
To understand rupee weakness, one must first understand dollar strength. The US Dollar is the world’s primary reserve currency — approximately 60% of all global foreign exchange reserves are held in dollars. This position was cemented by two historical events.
First, the Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944 pegged global currencies to the dollar, which was convertible to gold at USD 35 per ounce — making the dollar the global monetary anchor. Second, when Bretton Woods collapsed in 1971–73, the petrodollar system emerged: following US-Saudi agreements in the 1970s, oil began to be priced and traded exclusively in US dollars globally, ensuring perpetual demand for the currency.
Today, the dollar serves four simultaneous roles: reserve currency (held by central banks), trade currency (most global commodities priced in dollars), funding currency (international loans denominated in dollars), and safe-haven asset (demand surges in crises). The DXY (US Dollar Index) — created in 1973 — measures the dollar against a basket of six major currencies: Euro (57.6% weight), Japanese Yen, British Pound, Canadian Dollar, Swedish Krona, and Swiss Franc. The Indian Rupee is not in the DXY basket, yet a rising DXY consistently weakens the rupee through FPI outflows, rising import costs, and tighter global liquidity.
Think of the US Dollar as the world’s “master currency” — the language everyone speaks in international trade. When India buys oil, it must first buy dollars, then buy oil. So when the dollar strengthens (or when India needs more oil), India must spend more rupees to get those dollars. It’s like if every time you went to a foreign market, prices were only in one special currency you had to first purchase at whatever rate the seller decided.
| Currency | Country / Region | Weight in DXY |
|---|---|---|
| Euro (EUR) | Eurozone | 57.6% (highest weight) |
| Japanese Yen (JPY) | Japan | 13.6% |
| British Pound (GBP) | United Kingdom | 11.9% |
| Canadian Dollar (CAD) | Canada | 9.1% |
| Swedish Krona (SEK) | Sweden | 4.2% |
| Swiss Franc (CHF) | Switzerland | 3.6% |
| Indian Rupee (INR) | India | Not included |
📌 Key Causes of Rupee Depreciation in 2025–26
1. Surge in Crude Oil Prices and Import Dependence: India imports approximately 85–90% of its crude oil requirement. In early 2026, Brent crude surged past USD 120 per barrel due to West Asian geopolitical instability. A USD 10 rise per barrel adds approximately USD 12–15 billion to India’s annual import bill, directly widening the Current Account Deficit and increasing dollar demand.
2. Widening Trade and Current Account Deficit: The April–February 2025–26 trade deficit hit a record USD 310 billion; the full-year figure reached USD 333.2 billion (imports grew 7.6%, exports just 0.9%). The record single-month deficit was USD 41.68 billion in October 2025. The Current Account Deficit (CAD) was ~1.0% of GDP for April–December 2025, projected to widen to 1.7–2.0% of GDP for the full year.
3. FPI Outflows: Foreign Portfolio Investors withdrew approximately USD 19 billion from Indian equities in 2025 and a further USD 2.7 billion in January 2026 alone. Total net FPI outflows for FY 2025–26 stood at USD 16.5–17 billion. The trigger: US Federal Reserve’s high interest rate policy made dollar assets more attractive relative to Indian assets.
4. US Tariff Shock: In April 2025, the US imposed tariffs of 26–50% on Indian exports including gems, electronics, auto parts, apparel, and engineering goods. The rupee lost more than 6% of its value in weeks. An interim India-US trade deal in early 2026 reduced tariffs to 18%, providing partial relief.
5. RBI Rate Cuts Narrowing India-US Differential: The RBI cut the repo rate by a total of 125 basis points (from 6.5% to 5.25%) between February and December 2025, narrowing the yield gap between Indian and US assets and reducing the incentive for global capital to stay in India.
6. Global Geopolitical Uncertainty: Wars and supply chain disruptions consistently push global investors toward dollar safe-haven assets, pulling capital out of emerging markets like India and weakening the rupee.
| Cause | Mechanism | Key Data Point |
|---|---|---|
| High oil prices | Raises dollar demand for oil imports → widens CAD | Brent crude > USD 120/barrel (early 2026) |
| Trade deficit | More imports than exports → structural dollar demand | USD 333.2 billion deficit FY 2025–26 |
| FPI outflows | Investors sell rupees, buy dollars to exit India | ~USD 19 billion exit from equities in 2025 |
| US tariffs on India | Lower export earnings → fewer dollars entering India | 26–50% tariffs (Apr 2025); cut to 18% (2026) |
| RBI rate cuts | Narrows India-US yield gap → reduces foreign inflows | 125 bps cut (6.5% → 5.25%, Feb–Dec 2025) |
| Dollar safe-haven demand | Global crises pull capital to dollar, away from EM | Geopolitical tensions in West Asia, 2025–26 |
Don’t confuse CAD and Trade Deficit: The Trade Deficit is the gap between merchandise exports and imports (goods only). The Current Account Deficit (CAD) is broader — it includes goods, services, and transfer payments (like remittances). India runs a large trade deficit, but its services surplus and large remittances (USD 73 billion in Apr–Dec 2025) help offset it, resulting in a more moderate CAD (~1.0–2.0% of GDP).
🌍 Impact of Rupee Depreciation on the Indian Economy
Inflation and Import Costs: A weaker rupee raises the rupee cost of every dollar-denominated import. Since petroleum products, edible oils, fertilisers, coal, electronic components, capital goods, and gold are all imported, rupee depreciation directly feeds into domestic prices — raising petrol and diesel retail prices, transport costs, manufacturing input costs, and ultimately consumer price inflation. This is particularly damaging for lower-income households, for whom fuel and food constitute a large share of expenditure.
External Debt Burden: India’s external debt stands at approximately USD 682 billion. When the rupee weakens, the rupee-equivalent value of this debt rises even without any change in the underlying dollar amount — increasing debt servicing costs for Indian corporate borrowers and the sovereign.
Stock Market Volatility: FPI outflows create direct negative pressure on Indian equity markets. When foreign investors exit, stock indices fall, reducing market confidence and potentially triggering more outflows in a self-reinforcing cycle.
| Sector / Group | Impact of Rupee Depreciation | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| IT & Software (TCS, Infosys, Wipro) | ✅ Benefit | Dollar revenues; rupee cost base — every rupee fall expands INR margins |
| Pharma Exporters | ✅ Benefit | Export earnings in dollars become more valuable in rupee terms |
| Textile & Gem Exporters | ✅ Benefit | Price competitiveness improves in global markets |
| Airlines & Oil Companies | ❌ Hurt | Jet fuel and crude oil priced in dollars; import costs rise sharply |
| Auto Manufacturers | ❌ Hurt | Import component costs rise; margins compress |
| External Debt Borrowers | ❌ Hurt | Rupee value of USD 682B debt rises; servicing costs increase |
India’s IT sector is one of the world’s largest — generating over USD 240 billion in revenues — and earns almost entirely in foreign currency. A falling rupee is, paradoxically, one of the best things that can happen to Infosys or TCS’s quarterly results. The depreciation that causes pain at petrol pumps across India simultaneously boosts the profit margins of Bengaluru’s tech campuses. This distributional asymmetry — where currency depreciation transfers real income from import-dependent households to export-oriented corporates — is a significant but under-discussed dimension of monetary policy.
⚖️ RBI’s Policy Response: Forex Intervention and Liquidity Management
The RBI has employed an aggressive, multi-instrument strategy to manage the rupee’s depreciation. Its primary tool is spot market intervention — selling US dollars from forex reserves to increase dollar supply and arrest the rupee’s fall. In November 2024 alone, the RBI sold a record USD 20.2 billion. Over FY 2025–26, the RBI reportedly sold over USD 100 billion in spot and forward markets combined. Its forward book dollar deficit reached approximately USD 100–103 billion by March 2026.
India’s foreign exchange reserves peaked at an all-time high of USD 728.5 billion (week ending February 27, 2026), then fell to USD 681.4 billion by May 22, 2026 — a decline of over USD 47 billion from the peak. As of May 2026, reserves cover approximately 10–11 months of imports. India’s gold reserves increased to 880.52 metric tonnes by March 2026, with gold’s share in total reserves rising to 16.7%; over 77% of India’s gold is now stored domestically.
Beyond spot intervention, the RBI launched a USD 5 billion dollar-rupee swap auction in May 2026, which received bids of nearly USD 9.8 billion. The RBI also conducted Open Market Operations (OMOs) worth INR 1 trillion to buy government bonds and inject liquidity. Separately, the government doubled gold import duties to 15% (effective May 2026) to reduce unnecessary dollar outflow.
RBI’s Toolkit to Defend the Rupee: (1) Sell dollars from forex reserves in spot market; (2) Dollar-rupee swap auctions; (3) Open Market Operations (OMOs) to manage liquidity; (4) Repo rate adjustments to influence interest differentials; (5) Government: raise gold import duties to curb dollar outflows. All five instruments were used in FY 2025–26.
✨ India’s Structural Strengths: Pressured but Not Collapsing
Rupee depreciation reflects genuine vulnerabilities, but the Indian economy retains substantial buffers that distinguish this episode from more acute EM currency crises. Key strengths include:
- Forex reserves of USD 681.4 billion covering 10–11 months of imports — far stronger than the 2013 Taper Tantrum (USD 300 billion, 7 months) or the 1991 balance-of-payments crisis
- GDP growth of 8.2% in Q2 FY26; RBI projects 6.9% for FY 2026–27
- Domestic consumption at 56% of GDP — strong insulator from export-led shocks
- Remittances of USD 73 billion (April–December 2025) — second-largest source of foreign exchange after merchandise exports
- India’s sovereign credit rating was upgraded in August 2025
- Services exports are robust and largely untouched by tariffs
India’s 2025–26 forex reserve trajectory tells an interesting story: the RBI accumulated reserves during periods of rupee strength (intervening to prevent excessive appreciation), then spent them to arrest depreciation during pressure periods — a classic managed float strategy. The USD 47 billion decline from peak in just three months (February to May 2026) is rapid but not alarming at 10–11 months of import cover. The real risk is if the RBI’s forward book commitments (USD 100–103 billion) crystallise simultaneously — that would be the stress test scenario to watch.
📖 Long-Term Solutions: Structural Agenda for a Stronger Rupee
Short-term interventions can slow but not reverse structural depreciation. Durable solutions require addressing India’s trade fundamentals:
- Reduce oil import dependence by accelerating renewable energy deployment and energy efficiency
- Expand manufactured exports under Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes to grow dollar earnings
- Diversify export markets to reduce dependence on the US, which has imposed punitive tariffs
- Rupee internationalisation — the RBI is promoting INR-denominated trade settlement with South Asian neighbours and developing reference rates for trading partner currencies
- CBDC interoperability — exploring Digital Rupee compatibility with BRICS partners to reduce transaction costs in non-dollar trade
- Moving up the value chain from raw material exports to higher-value manufactured goods to build long-term current account resilience
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The rupee hit a record low of ₹94.71 per USD in March 2026. While it touched ₹95 in May 2026, the record low point was ₹94.71 in March. The total depreciation was ~14% from ₹83/USD in early 2024.
The Euro carries the highest weight in the DXY basket at 57.6%. The Indian Rupee is NOT included in the DXY at all — a frequent exam trap. The DXY basket has 6 currencies: Euro, Japanese Yen, British Pound, Canadian Dollar, Swedish Krona, and Swiss Franc.
The RBI cut the repo rate by a total of 125 basis points — from 6.5% (January 2025) to 5.25% (December 2025) — under RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra. The rate was held unchanged at 5.25% in February 2026.
India’s forex reserves hit an all-time high of USD 728.5 billion in the week ending February 27, 2026. They subsequently fell to USD 681.4 billion by May 22, 2026 — a decline of ~USD 47 billion as the RBI sold dollars to defend the rupee.
The Bretton Woods Agreement (1944) made the US Dollar convertible to gold at USD 35 per ounce, with other currencies pegged to the dollar — establishing the dollar as the global monetary anchor. The system collapsed in 1971–73, after which the DXY was created in 1973.