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RBI Dollar Sales Hit $43.2 Billion Amid Continued Rupee Pressure

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  • Last Updated: 23 Jan 2026 at 10:54 AM IST
RBI Dollar Sales Hit $43.2 Billion Amid Continued Rupee Pressure

According to the latest market reports, RBI’s net dollar sales have already climbed to $43.2 billion through November 2025, surpassing the total sold in the entire 2024-25 financial year.

Last year’s figure of $34.5 billion in net sales was the highest since the global financial crisis of 2008-09. These numbers illustrated how sharply the rupee had been moving amid global uncertainty and strong dollar demand.

Traders and analysts say this year’s pace of dollar sales reflects how actively the RBI has been trying to counter persistent weakness in the rupee.

The Indian rupee hit a historic low of around ₹91.70 per dollar on January 21, 2026. The decline has been driven largely by global risk aversion, outflows from equity markets, and strong dollar demand from importers. Hedging activity has added to the pressure on the currency.

In November 2025 alone, the RBI net sold about $9.71 billion to help curb excessive rupee decline.

Selling large amounts of foreign currency in the spot markets can drain rupee liquidity from the banking system. To manage this side effect, the RBI has also conducted foreign exchange buy-sell swaps worth more than $2 billion over the past two days.

These swaps allow the RBI to sell dollars now and agree to buy them back later. This means domestic cash conditions can stay more stable even as it meets immediate demand for dollars.

RBI officials have repeatedly said the central bank does not defend a fixed rupee level. Leadership statements have underlined that depreciation is driven mainly by broad demand for dollars in the market rather than any deliberate policy to let the rupee slide.

Rather than defending a particular currency level, the RBI's actions are typically viewed as attempts to maintain market order. However, traders have been keeping a careful eye on the size and frequency of these interventions, especially when the rupee reaches significant levels against the dollar.

Market participants describe the current backdrop as one driven by “flow-led” demand for dollars. When currency markets get volatile, central banks typically jump in to prevent drastic swings, though they're usually not chasing any particular exchange rate target.

These actions, according to some analysts, help in settling the markets during crucial times. However, others fear that excessive involvement can be a reason to delay currency adjustments and could result in bigger swings down the road.

The RBI's currency market activity will likely stay under scrutiny for now. Traders and policymakers are watching how the rupee handles global developments, shifts in capital flows, and incoming economic data over the next few months.

Sources:

Reuters

The Hindu

CNBC

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