The Indian rupee narrowly avoided breaching its all-time low on November 21, 2025, rebounding 0.24% to 88.56 against the USD—up 21 paise from Wednesday’s 88.77 trough—bolstered by Reserve Bank of India (RBI) spot sales and non-deliverable forwards (NDFs) amid October’s record $32.7 billion trade deficit. This stabilization—now -0.64% monthly—deflects September’s 88.47 plunge triggered by Trump’s 100% tariffs on Indian imports effective August 27, with CFTC net USD longs at 150,000 contracts signaling intervention efficacy from $1.2 trillion reserves. For USD/INR watchers, the pair’s RSI at 68 post-trough hints overbought pullback to 88.00 supports, yet 89.00 probes loom if FII outflows hit $1.5 billion monthly.
RBI’s two-sided playbook—$60 billion interventions YTD—counters FII sells ($1.5 billion November) and oil import surges at $450 billion annually, while fiscal stimulus whispers temper deficit drags. Trade dynamics: exports dipped 2.1% to $36.8 billion on global slowdowns, imports +5.6% to $69.5 billion via gold/electronics. Technically, 88.80’s touch—last week’s floor—evokes 2024’s 85.80 cap, with Stochastic at 75% cueing 87.50 retraces on US-India pact breakthroughs. Crosses underscore fragility: USD/INR’s 4.85% YTD weakening outpaces AUD/INR at 58.20 (-0.3%).
Geopolitics collides: tariff rollback odds at 40% via reciprocal deals buoy inflows, per Reuters polls eyeing 87.50 year-end. LiteFinance ranges 88.00-89.00 Q4, contingent on RBI’s REER overvaluation at 108.14 (8% premium). This avoidance—intraday at 88.47—epitomizes managed floats, with LongForecast at 87.20 2026 averages on normalization. Carry thrives via 6.5% repo, demanding tactical shorts below 88.80 in volatility’s grip.






