Rupee surged to a three-week high of 66.42 against the
American currency after the Federal Reserve's historic episode of monetary
tightening measures triggered panic dollar selling.
A spectacular rally in domestic equities further supported
the sentiment.
World financials and currency markets too reacted vehemently
to the landmark outcome, ending months of lingering confusion and uncertainty.
The US Federal Reserve announced a quarter-point increase in
the target range for the federal funds rate to 0.25-0.5 per cent.
This marks the end to the seven-year regime of near-zero interest
rates and the Federal Reserve's first interest rate hike in nearly a decade
aftermath of global financial meltdown in 2008 -- the worst economic disaster
following Lehman's bankruptcy.
The domestic unit opened firmly higher at 66.62 from
Wednesday's close of 66.73 at the Interbank Foreign Exchange Market against the
backdrop of overnight developments and continued its strong upmove till the
final trade to end with a solid gain of 31 paise, or 0.46 per cent at 66.42 --
the level not seen since November 24.
It briefly touched an intra-day low of 66.6750.
Frantic dollar selling by banks and corporates alongside
unwinded long dollar positions by speculators helped the rupee to rally.
Robust stockpile of forex reserves and improving
macro-economic environment alongside policy reforms by the Narendra Modi
government and measures taken by governor Raghuram Rajan largely helped the
Indian currency to withstand the volatility and pressure, a forex dealer said.
"The re-rating of India story and growing confidence in
growth outlook, which stands the best with a 7.4 per cent growth, also
bolstered sentiment, he added.
Incredibly long string of reasons including concerns over
the strength of the global economy, worries about slowdown in the world's
second-largest economy China and capital flight from emerging markets had
prompted Fed to hold rates steady in recent past, despite bullish macro cues.
On the global front, the dollar traded two-week highs
against a basket of its major peers.
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