
- Opening Slump: The Indian rupee opened 19 paise weaker on Wednesday, hitting 95.45 against the US dollar amid a broader sell-off in Asian markets.
- Gulf Escalation: Renewed conflict in the Gulf, highlighted by intercepted Iranian missile attacks, has severely dented global investor sentiment.
- Crude Oil Pressure: Brent crude climbed nearly 1% toward $97 per barrel, threatening India’s fiscal balance as a major energy importer.
- FPI Outflows: Foreign portfolio investors offloaded over $800 million in Indian equities in a single session, intensifying pressure on the domestic currency.
The Indian rupee slumped 19 paise to open at 95.45 against the US dollar on Wednesday, 3 June 2026, pinned down by a toxic mix of surging crude oil prices, aggressive foreign capital outflows, and a sweeping risk-off sentiment across Asian currency markets.
Gulf Tensions Spook Global Markets
Investor confidence took a severe hit following statements from the US military confirming that Iranian missile attacks targeting Bahrain, Kuwait, and other regional positions were either intercepted or failed. This sudden escalation in the Gulf has effectively derailed recent diplomatic backchannels between Washington and Tehran, raising fears of a prolonged regional conflict.
The geopolitical friction immediately rippled into the energy markets. Brent crude oil prices advanced for a third consecutive session, climbing roughly 1% to touch nearly $97 per barrel. For an economy like India, which imports over 80% of its crude requirements, rising oil prices trigger immediate concerns regarding an expanding current account deficit and imported inflation.
Asian Currencies Retread, FPIs Flee
The rupee’s weakness mirrors a larger trend across regional peers. A dominant US dollar pushed several Asian currencies to multi-month lows, with the Indonesian rupiah hitting an all-time nadir.
Compounding the domestic currency’s struggles is the rapid exit of overseas capital. Provisional exchange data revealed that Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) net sold more than $800 million worth of Indian equities on Tuesday alone. Local traders emphasized that while the capital flight is heavy, aggressive dollar-selling interventions by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) across various forex desks have prevented a chaotic freefall for the local currency.
Technical Outlook and Key Levels
Market experts suggest the USD/INR pair is entering a highly volatile zone. Commenting on the technical setup, Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money, noted that the pair is showing strong resilience above the ₹95.40 mark, finding firm support near the base of its long-term ascending trendline.
According to Ponmudi, the immediate resistance for the dollar stands between ₹95.60 and ₹95.70. If geopolitical anxieties worsen and the dollar breaks past this ceiling, the rupee could quickly slide toward the ₹95.80–₹95.90 range. Conversely, a strong defensive action by the RBI could pull the pair back down toward its crucial support zone of ₹95.30–₹95.20, keeping the near-term outlook cautiously bullish for the greenback.







