The rupee settled at 82.04 a dollar on Wednesday as compared to the previous close of 82.12. Robust foreign portfolio investments (FPIs) due to positive domestic growth outlook kept the rupee afloat for the major part of June. The currency depreciated more than 1 per cent in May.
Robust macroeconomic fundamentals led to a slew of foreign portfolio inflows into Indian equities. According to NSDL data on FPIs, the domestic market received net inflows of nearly Rs 20,372 crore in June.
The rupee has been favoured by an appreciation bias after the US Federal Open Market Committee kept the fund rates unchanged at 5-5.25 per cent, for the first time since March 2022. The Indian currency neared its highest level in six weeks against the dollar on Friday at Rs 81.86 a dollar.
Earlier, Fed officials saw the target rate at 5-5.25 per cent, which is the current range.
According to the CME Fedwatch tool, 76.9 per cent traders expect the US Fed to hike rates by 25 bps in July, while the rest expect a pause.
It aims to bring inflation to its medium-term target of 2 per cent, and is likely to tighten monetary policy further to achieve this.
Additionally, UK CPI data for April came in stronger-than-expected at 8.7 per cent. This led to speculation among market participants that the Bank of England may go for a 50 bps rate hike, rather than a 25 bps hike.

