
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has substantially increased its short dollar positions, surpassing the $100 billion mark for the first time.
This significant rise is directly linked to interventions amid escalating crude oil prices.
The RBI's short dollar positions reached $103 billion in March. This increase of $25.4 billion from February stems from aggressive currency market interventions prompted by surging crude oil prices due to geopolitical tensions.
According to RBI data, the total short positions are $51.4 billion in the up to one-year segment and $52.8 billion in the above one-year segment.
The central bank's decision to defend the rupee in both the spot and forward markets was triggered by heightened crude oil prices following geopolitical conflicts.
As crude oil, a significant import for India, rose in price, the rupee faced downward pressure. Consequently, RBI intervened more intensely in the currency market.
Due to the ongoing increase in crude oil prices, which reached $126, the rupee devalued to a new low of 95.3337 against the dollar.
The depreciating rupee can lead to a more extensive current account deficit since it makes imports more expensive amid a lack of capital inflows.
Read More: RBI Directs Banks to Report Offshore Rupee OTC Derivatives to CCIL!
In response to the rupee's fall, RBI has taken steps such as limiting banks' open position limits to $100 million.
An initial move was to prevent banks from offering offshore rupee contracts, but this measure was later reversed as the rupee recovered.
The RBI's short dollar book surpassing $100 billion signifies its proactive measures in defending the national currency amidst turbulent crude oil prices. These interventions aim to stabilise the economy as the rupee remains under pressure due to limited capital inflows and escalating oil prices.
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Published on: May 2, 2026, 11:51 AM IST

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