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The 10-year bond yield touched 6.40% levels in the early hours of trading, before easing and closing at 6.36%, up two basis points from its previous close.
The rupee traded between the range of 86.20/$1 to 85.93/$1, strengthening mildly in between due to central bank intervention and muted dollar sales by foreign banks, traders said.

Brent crude oil prices rose to $75 per barrel on Friday, from $68 per barrel the day before as Israeli strikes on Iran’s nuclear and military facilities hit risk sentiments.
A rise in crude oil prices is inflationary for India and adds pressure on the rupee as the country is a major importer of the commodity. A $10 per barrel increase in crude oil prices can widen the current account deficit by 0.4% of the GDP and add up to 35 basis points in retail inflation, according to Reuters.
The RBI likely sold dollars via state-run banks in the first half of the trading session, but in a muted manner, traders said. “The possible intervention by the RBI was only up to a certain level and did not make any effort to bring down to 85.70 levels. But a key resistance amid uncertainty in the Middle East would be at 86.25/$1 levels,” said Anil Bhansali, head of treasury at Finrex Treasury Advisors.For bonds too, the mood was fragile amid geopolitical tensions, traders said. “Since there has been a selloff and the yields touched 6.40%, we will be able to see some buying next week,” a bond trader at a primary dealership said.
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https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/forex/can-rupee-recover-from-its-worst-fall-in-over-a-month-due-to-rising-oil-prices/articleshow/121841346.cms