Rs 90 to a dollar: Whatโ€™s driving the fall and why it matters to you – explained
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Rs 90 to a dollar: Whatโ€™s driving the fall and why it matters to you - explained
The rupee’s fall past 90 is more than a number-itโ€™s a marker of a new phase in Indiaโ€™s economic story. (AI image)

Driving the newsOn Wednesday, the Indian rupee broke a historic barrier, falling below Rs 90 to the US dollar for the first time. Though the drop from Tuesdayโ€™s 89.94 may seem minor, the implications arenโ€™t.This milestone isnโ€™t just psychological-it signals a shift in how Indiaโ€™s economy is perceived, managed, and felt by its citizens.Why it mattersThe ripple effects stretch far beyond Dalal Street or forex traders. The rupeeโ€™s weakness is now hitting the average Indian household – from their fuel bills to EMIs, tuition fees, and travel costs.Micro meets macro: Imports = inflation: India imports 90% of its oil, and also depends on overseas suppliers for electronics, fertilizers, and edible oil. A weak rupee inflates these bills.Your next iPhone, fridge, or car? Costlier.Foreign education: Students studying abroad could be shelling out Rs 5โ€“10 lakh more annually compared to 2023, especially those paying USD tuition and living costs.Zoom in: Why did the rupee drop?Three main reasons:Trade tensions with the US: Recent trade negotiations failed, and US tariffs on Indian exports-some rising by 50%-hit business confidence hard.Investor exodus: Despite steady inflation and GDP growth, foreign investors pulled out $17 billion from Indian equities in 2025, adding pressure on the rupee.Policy shift at the RBI: The International Monetary Fund reclassified India’s exchange rate regime from “stabilized” to “crawl-like.” This suggests the RBI is now guiding, not guarding, the rupee. The big picture: What makes this different from earlier rupee crises?The dollar isnโ€™t the main villain: In 2022, a strong dollar weakened currencies across the globe. This time, the rupee is down even as the dollar remains steady.Indiaโ€™s war chest is full: The RBI has $690 billion in reserves-unlike the 2013 taper tantrum or the 2018 oil price shock. This creates strategic patience.Philosophy shift at RBI: Instead of fire-fighting, the central bank now aims for long-term resilience. Its goal is no longer to defend Rs 90 at all costs, but to allow natural depreciation based on fundamentals-like inflation differentials and trade shifts.โ€œFor now, the central bank may be letting the rupee weaken a little more to make exports more competitive in light of US tariffs,โ€ said David Forrester of Crรฉdit Agricole.

Dollar vs Rupee History

Dollar vs Rupee History

What theyโ€™re sayingBloomberg dubbed the rupee โ€œAsiaโ€™s worst-performing currency this year.โ€โ€œIf they allow the rupee to close above 90, we could see further speculative bets and the possibility of the rupee heading to 91,โ€Anindya Banerjee, currency analyst at Kotak Securities, told Bloomberg. The recent slide is โ€œhard to justify on a fundamental basis,โ€ he added.“The weak macro picture in India makes weak currency performance inevitable, there has been a slide in so many data points recently โ€“ rising trade deficits, weakening nominal GDP growth, weak FDI and foreigner selling down domestic equities, etc,” Sat Duhra, portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors in Singapore, told Reuters.The RBIโ€™s stance? Let it float-for now. With over $690 billion in reserves, India can act if needed, but the central bank prefers gradual adjustment to aggressive defense.Between the lines: Life is already getting more expensiveThe depreciation isn’t academic-itโ€™s household.Oil & energy: India imports 90% of its crude and over 60% of its edible oils. A weaker rupee makes them costlier.Electronics & appliances: Imported items-laptops, fridges, smartphones-will now come with steeper price tags.Everyday inflation: Cooking oil, LPG, and petrol will squeeze budgets further, especially for lower- and middle-income households.Zoom in: Families, students, and borrowers are hurtingFor students abroad: Tuition at $50,000/year was Rs 40 lakh at โ‚น80/$, but now itโ€™s Rs 45 lakh. Thatโ€™s a โ‚น5 lakh hike-several monthsโ€™ salary for many middle-class families.Education loans hurt more: A student repaying a dollar loan taken at Rs 80 now owes 12โ€“13% more in rupee terms.Borrowers and consumers: A family earning Rs1.5 lakh/month may now have to dip into savings or cut essentials to meet new EMI demands of student loans. What’s next: The pressure is widespreadVacations abroad? That $2,000 family trip just went from Rs 1.6 lakh to Rs 1.8 lakh.Small businesses: Those reliant on imported components or foreign travel now face higher costs and tighter margins.Is this good for exporters?The textbook answer: Yes. The reality: It’s complicated.

  • Winners: IT and business service firms paid in rupees but billing in dollars see better margins-though many hedge currency exposure, which limits gains.
  • Mixed bag: Pharma exporters benefit from the exchange rate but are squeezed by global price pressures and rising import costs of raw materials.
  • Losers: Textile and light manufacturing should win-but US tariffs blunt their advantage.

โ€œIf your goods hit a tariff wall of 25% or 50%, itโ€™s less helpful,โ€ said one trade economist.Silver lining: Remittance recipients are smilingIndia received $137โ€“138 billion in remittances in 2024-more than double any other country.A $500 monthly remittance now brings in Rs 45,000 instead of Rs 40,000.For rural and low-income families, this extra Rs 5,000/month is real uplift-sometimes funding education, healthcare, or property investments.What Indian families should do now

  • Match currency of income and loans: If you earn in rupees, avoid dollar loans.
  • Hedge wisely: For tuition and foreign payments, consider forward contracts or staggered payments to limit exchange rate shocks.
  • Plan with a cushion: Assume the rupee could drop further. Many consultants now suggest budgeting with Rs 93โ€“95/$ in mind for 2026 plans.
  • Leverage remittances smartly: Fixed deposits and short-term debt funds offer high real returns right now-worth exploring.
  • Diversify investments: Global mutual funds or India-focused funds heavy in export sectors (like IT or pharma) may offer better protection.

The bottom line:The rupee’s fall past 90 is more than a number-itโ€™s a marker of a new phase in Indiaโ€™s economic story.In letting the rupee float, policymakers are betting on long-term gains over short-term defense. But for millions of Indian families, that bet is already affecting daily life, monthly budgets, and multi-year plans.(With inputs from agencies)



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