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Been watching the USD/INR situation pretty closely lately, and honestly it's throwing off a lot of conventional wisdom. You'd think with foreign institutional investors pulling out of Indian markets, the rupee would be getting hammered. But nope - it's holding up way better than you'd expect. The pair's been trading in a tight range around 82.80 to 83.20, which is pretty stable considering the headwinds. If you're looking at converting 80 USD to INR right now, you're getting solid rates that reflect this stability.
What's interesting is that FII outflows really picked up through late 2024 and into early 2025. November saw the first monthly outflow since March, and things haven't exactly reversed since then. Yet the rupee isn't collapsing like it normally would in that scenario. The RBI's clearly doing some heavy lifting here with strategic interventions, but there's more going on beneath the surface.
India's current account deficit has actually tightened significantly - down to around 1.2% of GDP compared to 2.0% a couple years back. Their services sector is firing on all cylinders, remittance inflows are solid at over $100 billion annually, and they're sitting on $600 billion in forex reserves. These are real structural improvements, not just temporary support measures.
What I find most telling is how India's outperforming other emerging markets. While most currencies in that space depreciated sharply against the dollar in 2024, the rupee's decline stayed relatively contained at 2.3%. Compare that to the Brazilian real or South African rand getting absolutely pummeled, and you see why foreign investors still see value here despite the portfolio outflows.
The domestic institutional investors are also stepping up to fill some of the FII gap, and corporate dollar inflows remain decent. So you've got this interesting dynamic where capital flows are weaker, but the currency isn't following the old playbook. Worth monitoring how this plays out as global monetary policy continues shifting.