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Rupee opened higher, Dollar dips vs. major currencies

Tuesday,   15-Sep-2020   10:40 AM (IST)

The Indian rupee opened the day higher at 73.38/39 levels compared to its previous close at 73.4750/4850 levels amid Yuan-led advance in Asian currencies. Indian federal government bond yields are trading largely unchanged in early trade. Equity markets rose half a per cent on Tuesday, tracking positive cues from the Wall Street. At 10:10 AM, the S&P BSE Sensex was trading at 38,897, up 140 point, while the broader Nifty50 was at 11,481 up 41 point. As per the technical indicators range for the USDINR pair may be 73.00-73.65 levels. Rupee has an immediate support at 73.45 levels. A breach of the same may see rupee at 73.62 followed by 73.85 levels. On the positive side rupee is likely to face resistance at 73.24 levels and if it is able to break the same then it may gain up to 73.06 levels followed by 72.87 levels.

The dollar dipped against riskier currencies on Tuesday as hopes for a COVID-19 vaccine and big corporate deals improved investor appetite for assets such as the Yuan and the euro. The dollar index dipped to 93.029, slipping further from a one-month high of 93.664 touched last Wednesday, with its low last week of 92.695 seen as an immediate support. The euro inched up to $1.1867, having gained for four straight sessions until Monday. Against the safe-haven yen, the dollar traded at 105.73 yen, having touched a two-week low of 105.55 yen on Monday. Helping sentiment, AstraZeneca resumed British clinical trials of its COVID-19 vaccine, one of the most advanced in development while Pfizer Inc and BioNTech SE proposed expanding their Phase 3 COVID-19 vaccine trial. Wall Street shares bounced back also as several multi-billion dollar deals -- including Nvidia's purchase of chip designer Arm and a deal between Oracle and China's ByteDance on TikTok -- lifted confidence. The British pound bounced back to $1.2851 , following a fall of 3.66% last week, showing limited reaction after the UK government won an initial Parliamentary vote on its controversial bill to violate the Brexit deal with the European Union. Still, traders said the currency looks vulnerable as the EU warns British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's bill would collapse trade talks and propel the United Kingdom towards a messy Brexit. Elsewhere, the offshore Chinese Yuan hit a 16-month high of 6.8053 Yuan per dollar on Monday and last traded at 6.8098. China's retail sales and industrial output data for August due later in the day is its immediate focus. The Yuan’s strength helped to lift MSCI emerging market currency index to a six-month high. The Australian dollar slipped 0.2% to $0.7270, as odds narrowed for further monetary policy easing by the country's central bank. Traders also look to central bank policy meetings in the United States on Wednesday and in Japan and Britain on Thursday. In particular, this week's Federal Reserve meeting will be its first since Chairman Jerome Powell unveiled a shift toward greater tolerance of inflation, effectively pledging to keep interest rates low for longer. Projections from Fed policymakers that inflation will remain below 2% in their economic forecasts, to be extended to 2023 this time, could strengthen expectations that interest rates will stay low for a long period of time, analysts say.