Rupee opened lower, Yen higher vs. Dollar
Thursday,
02-Dec-2021
10:42 AM (IST)
The Indian rupee opened the day lower at 75.05/06 levels compared to its previous close at 74.9050/9150 levels tracking losses in regional currencies on worries about the global spread of the Omicron coronavirus variant and a likely hawkish U.S. Federal Reserve policy outcome. India’s federal government bond yields trading lower in early session, tracking declines in U.S. Treasury yields and oil prices amid worries that new coronavirus variant may impact recovery across the globe. Indian shares opened marginally higher on Thursday, as gains in autos, pharma and energy were capped by fears about the new Omicron coronavirus variant after the United States became the latest country to report a case. At 10:27 AM, the S&P BSE Sensex was trading at 58,106 up 421 point, while the broader Nifty50 was at 17,288 up 121 point. As per the technical indicators range for the USDINR pair may be 74.80-75.30 levels. Rupee has an immediate support at 75.11 levels. A breach of the same may see rupee at 75.24 followed by 75.36 levels. On the positive side rupee is likely to face resistance at 74.85 levels and if it is able to break the same then it may gain up to 74.70 levels followed by 74.60 levels.
The safe-haven yen hovered near a seven-week high on Thursday while the rand and riskier currencies languished as the Omicron coronavirus variant established itself as the dominant strain in South Africa and continued to spread globally. Early indications suggesting Omicron may be markedly more contagious than previous variants have rattled financial markets on worries that a return to travel bans and lockdowns could choke off the nascent global recovery. The strain has been found in places as widespread as Australia, Britain, Canada and Japan, even as those countries rapidly tighten their borders. Against Japan's currency, the U.S. dollar edged 0.11% higher to 112.875 yen, but remained close to Tuesday's low of 112.535, a level not seen since Oct. 11. Against the South African rand, the greenback was off 0.12% at 16.0025, after a more than 1% surge overnight. The number of new cases reported in South Africa - where Omicron was first discovered four weeks ago - doubled from Tuesday to Wednesday. The country's National Institute for Communicable Diseases said 74% of all the virus genomes it had sequenced last month had been of the new variant. The first case in the United States, reported on Wednesday, was a fully vaccinated person in California who returned from South Africa on Nov. 22 and tested positive seven days later. Despite the uncertainty spawned by Omicron, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell reiterated in Day 2 of testimony to Congress on Wednesday that he and fellow policymakers will consider at their Dec. 14-15 meeting a faster taper of stimulus, which could open the door to earlier interest rates hikes. The dollar index, which measures the currency versus six peers, edged 0.03% higher to 96.07, consolidating in the middle of its range over the past two weeks, when it also rose as high as 96.938 for the first time since July of last year. The risk-sensitive Aussie was about flat at $0.7105, not far from Tuesday's low of $0.7063, its weakest since early November of last year. Sterling, often considered a risk-on currency, was little changed at $1.3276. It plunged to a near one-year low of $1.31945 on Tuesday. The euro was steady at $1.1316, continuing its recovery after dipping to a near 17-month low of $1.1186 last month.
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