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Prof K Nageshwar: Forex Reserves Up, Rupee Down: Why (Video)

         విదేశీ మారక నిలువలు పెరుగుతున్నాయి, రూపాయి పతనం:ఏమిటి విచిత్రం||Forex Reserves Up, Rupee Down: Why||

The Indian economy is going through one of its worse phases in living memory. Yet, not all is lost. The country’s foreign exchange reserves are at an all-time high , according to data released by India’s central bank on June 12.
The reasons behind the swelling forex reserves are India’s shrinking import bill, an increase in foreign direct investments, improved inflows from foreign portfolio investors into the stock and debt markets, and the Reserve Bank of India’s buying spree.

Brent crude oil prices have fallen sharply since the beginning of the year, hitting a 20-year low in April. This means India has to shell out fewer dollars for importing oil, which makes up a large part of its imports. India is likely to save $59 billion on oil imports this year, according to a report dated May 26 by Mumbai-based Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

Besides this, foreign money flowing into India is filling the forex coffers. Over the last couple of months, oil-to-telecom conglomerate Reliance Industries alone has attracted foreign investment worth more than Rs1 lakh crore by selling stakes in its Jio Platforms.

 

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Prof K Nageshwar: Forex Reserves Up, Rupee Down: Why (Video)

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Summary
Prof K Nageshwar: Forex Reserves Up, Rupee Down: Why (Video)
Title
Prof K Nageshwar: Forex Reserves Up, Rupee Down: Why (Video)
Description

విదేశీ మారక నిలువలు పెరుగుతున్నాయి, రూపాయి పతనం:ఏమిటి విచిత్రం||Forex Reserves Up, Rupee Down: Why|| The Indian economy is going through one of its worse phases in living memory. Yet, not all is lost. The country’s foreign exchange reserves are at an all-time high , according to data released by India’s central bank on June 12. The reasons behind the swelling forex reserves are India’s shrinking import bill, an increase in foreign direct investments, improved inflows from foreign portfolio investors into the stock and debt markets, and the Reserve Bank of India’s buying spree. Brent crude oil prices have fallen sharply since the beginning of the year, hitting a 20-year low in April. This means India has to shell out fewer dollars for importing oil, which makes up a large part of its imports. India is likely to save $59 billion on oil imports this year, according to a report dated May 26 by Mumbai-based Motilal Oswal Financial Services. Besides this, foreign money flowing into India is filling the forex coffers. Over the last couple of months, oil-to-telecom conglomerate Reliance Industries alone has attracted foreign investment worth more than Rs1 lakh crore by selling stakes in its Jio Platforms.