rupee logged its biggest daily decline against the U.S. dollar in nearly seven weeks on Wednesday, pressured by persistent dollar demand from importers and election-related risks.
The rupee ended at 83.3450, down from 83.1775 in the previous session. It fell 0.2% on Wednesday, its biggest daily fall since April 12.
The recent decline in the rupee has been «exacerbated» by month-end dollar buying by oil importers, said Sugandha Sachdeva, founder of SS WealthStreet, a New Delhi-based research firm.
«Significant uncertainty» looms for the rupee ahead of the impending election outcome, she said, pegging a «strong» support level for the domestic unit at 83.60.
Indian equities struggled in the backdrop of uncertainty around the domestic election results. India's weeks-long general elections end on Saturday, with the ballots set to be counted on June 4.
Analysts see a shock defeat for Prime Minister Narendra Modi as an unlikely event, but fear a market correction — like one witnessed two decades ago — in the event of an 'unclear' mandate.
Ahead of the election outcome, S&P Global Ratings retained India's sovereign rating but raised its outlook to 'positive' from 'stable' citing the South Asian nation's strong economic fundamentals.
Foreign investors have sold about $2.6 billion of Indian equities in May on a net basis so far.
If the rupee breaches 83.60 convincingly, the possibility of a move towards the 84.20 mark cannot be ruled out, Sachdeva said.
Asian currencies were all down on the day, with the 10-year U.S.