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India's central bank said on May 25 it will do “whatever is required” to ensure orderly movements in the foreign exchange market, Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra told Mint.
The rupee has weakened about 6% since the West Asia war began on Feb. 28 and, by some measures, now looks undervalued in both nominal and real effective exchange rate (REER) terms.
Malhotra stressed the RBI does not target a specific exchange rate level but stands ready to intervene if speculative pressures build.
The central bank has nearly $700 billion in foreign exchange reserves and a toolkit to counter disorderly moves.
He also flagged the need to reduce India’s current account deficit and improve the capital account.
The RBI’s primary mandate remains inflation targeting; if inflation developments provide room, the bank will support growth.
Malhotra said a normalisation of the West Asia situation could allow the rupee to appreciate.





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