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Rupee opened higher, Dollar eased vs. major currencies

Wednesday,   09-Jan-2019   09:07 AM (IST)

The Indian rupee opened the day higher at 70.05/06 levels compared to its previous close at 70.20/21 levels as upbeat China trade deal comment from US President Donald Trump boosts Asian currencies. Indian government bonds lower in early trade as uptick in crude oil prices and U.S. Treasury yields weighs on appetite. Benchmark indices opened higher today taking cues from their Asian peers. Sensex opens 200 pts up and Nifty above 10,850. As per the technical indicators range for the USDINR pair may be 69.70-70.65 levels. Rupee has an immediate support at 70.34 levels. A breach of the same may see rupee at 70.50 followed by 70.77 levels. On the positive side rupee is likely to face resistance at 70.00 levels and if it is able to break the same then it may gain up to 69.91 levels followed by 69.78 levels.

The dollar eased against some of its peers on Wednesday, as hopes of progress in the Sino-U.S. trade dispute boosted commodity-linked and riskier currencies. Increased risk appetite helped lift the Australian dollar after U.S. government officials said that trade talks between China and the United States will continue for an unscheduled third day on Wednesday. The Aussie rose 0.2 percent to $0.7152, after touching a three-week high of $0.7172 in early trading on optimism around the Sino-U.S. talks. The Australian dollar is often seen as a proxy for Chinese growth because of Australia's export-reliant economy and China being the country's biggest destination for its commodities. The rally in risk assets has accelerated since last Friday when Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said he was aware of risks to the economy and would be patient and flexible in policy decisions this year. The dollar index gave up 0.1 percent to 95.787 in early trade. The index, which gained 0.2 percent during the previous session, hovered close to an 11-week low of 95.638 touched early this week. Elsewhere, the euro gained 0.2 percent to $1.1457, but its rebound was not big enough to recover a slightly steeper loss booked during the previous session on concerns about a slowdown in the euro zone economy. An unexpected fall in German industrial output for the third straight month weighed on the euro overnight. The drop was modest, but it underscored concerns about a slowdown and the European Central Bank's caution as it tries to wean the region off stimulus. The British pound gained 0.2 percent to $1.2742 on the day. Traders expect sterling to remain volatile over the next few weeks due to Brexit woes. The British parliament is due to vote on Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit agreement on Jan. 15, and the run-up is likely to dominate trading in sterling. May is set to lose the vote unless she can convince opponents within and outside her party to back her deal.