LOADING...
Summarize
RBI sold $3.6B in June to stabilize rupee
REER remained stable at 98.35 in July

RBI sold $3.6B in June to stabilize rupee

Aug 29, 2025
01:33 pm

What's the story

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) sold $3.6 billion in June, in a bid to stabilize the depreciation of the Indian rupee (INR). The local currency closed at 85.47 per dollar during the month, a slight improvement from its opening value of 85.50/$1. In July, the real effective exchange rate (REER) remained stable at 98.35, indicating that the rupee is undervalued and potentially enhancing India's export competitiveness.

Market intervention

Highlights of RBI's foreign exchange reserves

The RBI's monthly bulletin revealed that the central bank sold $3.66 billion in the spot foreign exchange market in June. This was after buying $1.76 billion from the same market in May. The bulletin also noted that in June, the RBI bought $1.16 billion and sold $4.83 billion, This highlights its active role in managing currency fluctuations through the strategic buying and selling of foreign exchange reserves on the spot market to stabilize the rupee's value against global currencies.

Currency pressure

Current account deficit and forex reserves

The INR faced pressure in June due to uncertainties related to US tariffs. Despite this, India's external sector remained resilient with a modest current account deficit and forex reserves sufficient for 11 months of imports. The RBI bulletin noted that even with a slight depreciation against the US dollar in July, the rupee remained one of the least volatile currencies among major Emerging Market and Developing Economies (EMDEs) during this period.