The Indian rupee may slip to an all-time low at open on Monday, as lingering worries over the impact of Donald Trump's win ...
The Indian rupee is likely to open at a lifetime low on Tuesday, weighed by the rally in the dollar index and the slump in ...
For all latest news ... ING Bank said in a note. The bank reckons the dollar index may consolidate in the 104.5-105.5 range before breaking higher. Meanwhile, dollar-rupee forward premiums ...
"We see the dollar strengthening into year-end," ING Bank said in a note. The bank reckons the dollar index may consolidate in the 104.5-105.5 range before breaking higher. Meanwhile, dollar-rupee ...
It's "quite likely that it (rupee) will remain in a ... to end," Societe Generale said in a note. Overseas investors have net pulled out about USD 2.5 billion from Indian stocks over November ...
"We see the dollar strengthening into year-end," ING Bank said in a note. The bank reckons the dollar index may consolidate in the 104.5-105.5 range before breaking higher. Meanwhile, dollar-rupee ...
NEW DELHI: The rupee may depreciate 8-10 per ... term as investors flock to dollar-based assets, on a positive note, a lower rupee might provide an export advantage, potentially boosting revenues ...
Declining for the fourth straight session, the rupee dropped 2 paise to hit a new lifetime low of 84.39 ... on a positive note, a lower rupee might provide an export advantage, potentially ...
After beginning the week on a negative note, the dollar index got ... will need a close watch. The Indian Rupee (USDINR: ...
"We see the dollar strengthening into year-end," ING Bank said in a note. The bank reckons the dollar index may consolidate in the 104.5-105.5 range before breaking higher. Meanwhile, dollar-rupee ...
Declining for the fourth straight session, the rupee dropped 2 paise to hit a new lifetime low of 84.39 (provisional ... term as investors flock to dollar-based assets, on a positive note, a lower ...
The Indian government is expanding its railway network into remote parts of Kashmir. But many farmers in the Himalayan region fear the project will destroy their orchards and their livelihoods.