Indian rupee shot up by 0.8% on 15 October 2025, marking the highest single-day increase in nearly four months, because the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is said to have sold heavy volumes of U.S dollars to curb speculative demand. (Economic Times)
The domestic currency ended at ₹88.0750 to one dollar, compared to the previous close of ₹88.7975. It had reversed losses in the earlier sessions, yet it was on the verge of its lowest-ever level. (ET report)
The question now arises for traders: Is this upswing here to last, or is it a reaction to speculative positions?
These confluences of internal and external forces helped turn sudden weakness into a sharp rebound.
For investors and forex strategists, such a reversal suggests that the RBI is not content with passively defending levels but actively managing volatility.
Will the rupee sustain this bounce, or revert as macro and external forces step back in?
These levers will matter differently depending on sectoral exposure and trade dependencies.
The sudden gain of 0.8% in the rupee, its best performance in almost four months, is due to the perceived sale of dollars by the RBI and is the most imperative intervention against speculative forces. Whether this will be the beginning of a long-term recovery or just a short-term adjustment is yet to be seen. The big question is: Will the aggressive measures by the RBI stabilise the rupee’s footing, or will global rates, capital flows, and trade forces dictate its direction?
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