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Rupee opened higher, Dollar holding gain vs. major currencies

Tuesday,   21-Sep-2021   10:33 AM (IST)

The Indian rupee opened the day higher at 73.59/60 levels compared to its previous close at 73.7350/7450 levels tracking recovery in offshore yuan and many Asian currencies. India’s federal government bond yields marginally down as central bank to buy benchmark bond at debt purchase this week. Indian shares bounced back on Tuesday, helped by gains in the technology and banking sectors, while increasing worries that Chinese property giant China Evergrande could default on its debt pile gripped global markets. At 10:16 AM, the S&P BSE Sensex was trading at 58,378 down 113 point, while the broader Nifty50 was at 17,375 down 22 point. As per the technical indicators range for the USDINR pair may be 73.45-73.95 levels. Rupee has an immediate support at 73.74 levels. A breach of the same may see rupee at 73.85 followed by 74.00 levels. On the positive side rupee is likely to face resistance at 73.56 levels and if it is able to break the same then it may gain up to 73.42 levels followed by 73.29 levels.

The offshore yuan wallowed near an almost one-month low on Tuesday while the safe-haven dollar and yen stood tall as investors sought shelter from a potential China Evergrande default. The New Zealand dollar also sank after the central bank's assistant governor poured cold water on bets for a 50 basis point rate hike next month. The yuan stood at 6.4805 per dollar after weakening as far as 6.4879 on Monday for the first time since Aug. 23. Mainland markets are shut for holidays until Wednesday. The U.S. currency had already been rising on expectations the Federal Reserve will signal a start to stimulus tapering at a two-day policy meeting that ends Wednesday.  The greenback was mostly flat at $1.17245 per euro after gaining to $1.1700 overnight, also a first since Aug. 23. The yen eased back about 0.2% to 128.50 to the single currency, but still close to its high of 128.155 from Monday, a level not seen since Aug. 20. The dollar rose 0.18% to 109.58 yen, trimming some of its overnight losses, but with the pair still meandering near the middle of the trading range of the past 2-1/2 months. The Bank of Japan decides policy on Wednesday, with no change expected to its massive stimulus programme. The dollar index, which measures the currency against six major peers, was little changed at 93.2241 after rising overnight to 93.455 for the first time since Aug. 23. Market sentiment has been rattled by potential contagion from Evergrande, which is trying to raise funds to pay a host of lenders, suppliers and investors. A deadline for an $83.5 million interest payment on one of its bonds is due on Thursday, and the company has $305 billion in liabilities. On Monday, Chinese regulators warned that the company's insolvency could fuel broader risks in the country's financial system if not stabilised. The Aussie edged 0.07% higher to $0.7258 after dipping to $0.72205 in the previous session for the first time since Aug. 24. New Zealand's kiwi dropped 0.3% to $0.7011, approaching Monday's low of $0.7006, the weakest level this month. A 50 basis point hike to the RBNZ's policy rate looks unlikely after the text of a speech from Assistant Governor Christian Hawkesby hinted that the central bank would move in 25 basis point increments. Sterling was little changed at $1.3662 after sliding to a nearly one-month low of $1.3640 overnight. The Bank of England announces a policy decision on Thursday. The loonie regained some footing having hit a one-month low of C$1.2896 against its U.S. counterpart overnight heading into national election that could heighten political uncertainty in Canada. The dollar slipped 0.15% to C$1.2805 in Asia. Cryptocurrencies were also hurt by the turn in risk sentiment, with bitcoin down more than 3% to around $41,700 on Tuesday after earlier touching $40,192.90 for the first time since Aug. 6. Smaller rival ether also slid around 3% to $2,891.77, after dipping to $2,803.20, also a first since Aug. 6.