The Indian rupee is holding perilously near record lows on November 21, 2025, clinging to 88.77 against the USD—a 0.05% daily dip marking a 2.17% monthly weakening—bolstered by Reserve Bank of India (RBI) spot sales amid $16.5 billion foreign investor outflows since August tariffs, per Reuters. This teetering hold—-6.17% YTD—reflects importer dollar demand and delayed US-India trade pacts, with RBI’s $60 billion interventions defending the 88.80 psychological floor, though forwards premiums at 1.2% signal 15% month-end odds for breaches to 89.00. For INR traders, RSI at 68 overbought eyes 89.00 probes if 88.77 yields, yet Stochastic at 75% cues 87.50 retraces on pact breakthroughs at 40% odds, per LiteFinance ranges.
US tariffs’ bite dominates: August’s 18% effective rate—up from 3% pre-2024—slashed exports $86.5 billion to $50 billion projected by 2026, triggering FII equity sales ($1.5 billion November) and $32.7 billion October deficits, with oil imports at $450 billion amplifying pressure. RBI’s REER at 108.14 (8% premium) signals overvaluation, yet $1.2 trillion reserves buffer, with state banks curbing shorts at CFTC’s 150,000 extremes. Technically, 88.80’s defense—last week’s trough—evokes 2024’s 85.80 cap, with 6.5% repo drawing carry despite IMF’s 5-7% trade contraction forecast if tariffs endure.
Broader dynamics: exports fell 2.1% to $36.8 billion on slowdowns, imports +5.6% to $69.5 billion via gold/electronics, per BEA, while NAGA eyes 89-90 by year-end on FII sells. For quants, 8.2% volatility offers straddles, gamma on December 5 payrolls targeting 87.50 downside. This near-lows hold—88.77 trough—epitomizes managed floats: RBI’s arsenal tempers aversion, urging tactical shorts below 88.80 in tariff limbo’s tense truce






