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India rupee, bonds to be guided by fallout from Kashmir attack

April 28, 2025
in Markets
India rupee, bonds to be guided by fallout from Kashmir attack
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MUMBAI: The path for Indian rupee and government bonds this week hinges on the geopolitical fallout from the militant attack in Kashmir, traders said.

India has said there were Pakistani elements in the April 22 attack, when militants shot 26 men in a meadow in the Pahalgam area of Kashmir, and Islamabad has denied any involvement.

The nuclear-armed nations have unleashed a raft of measures against each other, with India keeping a critical river water-sharing treaty in abeyance and Pakistan closing its airspace to Indian airlines, among other steps.

Fears of fresh tensions with long-time rival and neighbour Pakistan spooked markets last week.

On Friday, the rupee swung between 85.09 and 85.65 to the dollar and closed at 85.45. Stocks declined 0.7%-0.9% while the 10-year benchmark bond yield rose 4 basis points to end at 6.3645%.

Friday’s trade underscored the market’s concern over the potential fallout from the Kashmir attack, Kunal Kurani, Assistant Vice President at Mecklai Financial, said. “For now, the rupee’s near-term range is 85.00 to 85.70.

That could shift if there are significant developments.“

Currency traders will also keenly watch U.S. tariff headlines, after there were signs of a de-escalation of the trade war between the U.S. and China.

A positive shift in trade negotiations could support the dollar, while a lack of progress or negative headlines would likely pressure it lower.

Indian rupee falls amid rising tensions with Pakistan after Kashmir attack

Meanwhile, traders expect that India’s benchmark bond yield to hover between 6.30% and 6.40% this week, with any flare up in tensions between the two nuclear-armed rivals resulting in a break to the upside.

The yield has been on a downtrend recently due to expectations of more rate cuts from the domestic central bank and its assurance on a banking system liquidity surplus.

The Reserve Bank of India will buy 200 billion rupees of bonds this week. It has bought nearly 3.7 trillion rupees of bonds in the first four months of 2025.

“A rate cut in June appears to be a done deal barring some severe dislocation in global markets that adversely affects EM currencies like rupee,” ICICI Securities Primary Dealership said.

Tags: Indian rupee
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