The Indian rupee may finally have found a floor after months of sustained depreciation, with Jefferies indicating that the currency has likely bottomed out following its sharp underperformance against major emerging market peers, ANI reported.In its latest GREED & fear note, Jefferies said the rupee has been โthe worst performer year to date amongst major emerging market currencies,โ slipping 3.4 per cent in 2025 to trade near Rs 88.7 per US dollar. The firm added that it now sees a โgrowing likelihood that the rupee has bottomed,โ citing macroeconomic resilience and improving balance-of-payments conditions.Jefferies highlighted a current account deficit at a two-decade low of 0.5 per cent of GDP and foreign exchange reserves of USD 690 billionโproviding nearly 11 months of import coverโas key stabilising factors. The brokerage added that its India strategist had โbeen assuming, so far correctly, that 89 should mark the bottom for the rupee.โOn equities, Jefferies pointed to heavy foreign outflows this year, with FPIs selling USD 16.2 billion so far in 2025 and dragging Indiaโs relative performance down by 27 percentage points versus the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.However, robust domestic inflows have more than compensated. Equity mutual funds recorded Rs 321 billion (USD 3.6 billion) of net inflows in October and Rs 3.7 trillion (USD 42 billion) in the first ten months of the year. Across channels, domestic equity inflows averaged USD 7.4 billion a month between January and Septemberโsufficient to absorb the USD 5.7 billion in monthly equity supply, the report said.Jefferies also flagged firm credit momentum, with bank lending growth accelerating from 9 per cent in May to 11.5 per cent by mid-October. FDI trends remain supportive as well, with gross inflows rising 13 per cent in 2024โ25 to USD 81 billion and up 18 per cent year-on-year during AprilโAugust 2025.A major thematic focus of the report is Indiaโs positioning in the global artificial intelligence cycle. Jefferies described India as the โreverse AI trade,โ arguing that if the global AI rally cools, India could outperform while AI-heavy markets like Taiwan, Korea and China face pressure.โThese three countries currently account for 61.8 per cent of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, while India accounts for 15.3 per cent,โ the brokerage noted.