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Indian Rupee Opens at Rs 96.26 Against the Dollar, Down 6 Paise: Three Reasons Behind the Weakness

  • May 22, 2026
  • Posted by: Neeraj Pandey
  • Category: News
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Indian Rupee Opens at Rs 96.26 Against the Dollar

The Indian rupee opened at Rs 96.26 on 22 May 2026, down 6 paise from the previous close. A strong dollar, FII outflows of $23 billion and crude above $105 are the key drivers.

The Indian rupee opened at Rs 96.26 against the US dollar on 22 May 2026, a decline of 6 paise from the previous close. The rupee has been under sustained pressure in 2026, losing approximately 7 percent year-to-date from Rs 89.86 at the start of the year. The currency touched Rs 96.64 against the dollar on 20 May 2026, the lowest level since March 2026, per Trading Economics. The RBI has reportedly intervened by selling dollars in the onshore market to stabilise the rupee, and has announced a USD 5 billion dollar-rupee swap auction scheduled for 26 May 2026.

Table of Contents

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  • Three Reasons the Indian Rupee Is Falling
    • 1. Strong US Dollar and High US Yields
    • 2. Record FII Outflows of $23 Billion in 2026
    • 3. Crude Oil Above $105 Widens India’s Trade Deficit
  • What the RBI Is Doing to Protect the Rupee
  • FAQs on Indian Rupee Today
    • Why is the Indian rupee falling against the US dollar today?
    • What is the Indian rupee all-time low?

Three Reasons the Indian Rupee Is Falling

1. Strong US Dollar and High US Yields

The US 10-year Treasury yield is near 4.59 percent, close to its one-year high. When US yields are elevated, global investors prefer dollar-denominated assets, strengthening the US dollar and weakening emerging market currencies like the Indian rupee. The FOMC minutes released on 20 May 2026 showed Fed officials prepared to raise interest rates if inflation remains elevated, reinforcing dollar strength. A stronger dollar directly weakens the rupee.

2. Record FII Outflows of $23 Billion in 2026

Foreign investors have pulled a record $23 billion (approximately Rs 2.21 lakh crore) from Indian stocks in 2026. When FIIs sell Indian equities, they receive rupees, which they then convert to US dollars to repatriate, creating significant dollar demand in the forex market. The RBI’s $103 billion forward book adds an additional constraint, reducing the central bank’s effective firepower to defend the rupee against this scale of outflow. Every session of FII selling adds to the structural dollar demand that is pushing the Indian rupee weaker.

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3. Crude Oil Above $105 Widens India’s Trade Deficit

India imports approximately 85 to 88 percent of its crude oil requirements in US dollars. With Brent crude above $105 per barrel, up from below $70 at the start of 2026, India’s oil import bill has increased by approximately USD 60 billion on an annualised basis. Oil marketing companies (OMCs) buying dollars to pay for crude imports create constant structural dollar demand in the forex market, which puts persistent downward pressure on the Indian rupee. The RBI has pointed to the rupee hovered near Rs 96.40 per dollar, pausing losses after briefly crossing the Rs 97 mark for the first time ever. Softer oil prices on 20 May (crude fell 5% to $105 on Hormuz optimism) provided temporary relief.

What the RBI Is Doing to Protect the Rupee

  • Direct intervention: RBI reportedly sold dollars in the onshore forex market after the rupee repeatedly hit all-time lows, per Bloomberg.
  • USD 5 billion swap auction: Scheduled for 26 May 2026, allows RBI to inject dollar liquidity and reduce dollar demand from banks.
  • Forward book management: RBI’s net short dollar forward book stood at $103.06 billion as of end-March 2026. Unwinding these will also affect liquidity.
  • Rate hike consideration: RBI is reportedly considering a rate hike to attract capital inflows, though this conflicts with the mandate to support growth.

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FAQs on Indian Rupee Today

Why is the Indian rupee falling against the US dollar today?

Ans. The Indian rupee opened at Rs 96.26, down 6 paise, on 22 May 2026 due to: a strong US dollar (supported by high US 10-year yield of 4.59% and Fed rate hike expectations above 55%), record FII outflows of $23 billion from India in 2026 and crude oil above $105 increasing dollar demand from oil importers.

What is the Indian rupee all-time low?

Ans. The Indian rupee touched Rs 96.64 against the US dollar on 20 May 2026, its lowest level since March 2026. The all-time record low for 2026 was Rs 96.5685 per dollar on 19 May 2026 (per exchange rate data). The rupee has lost approximately 7 percent year-to-date in 2026 from its opening level of Rs 89.86.



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Author: Neeraj Pandey
Neeraj Pandey is a Financial Content Writer at Univest, covering Indian equity markets with a specialisation in quarterly earnings previews and analyst consensus analysis. His published work tracks Q4 FY26 results across 10+ sectors — from IT heavyweights like Infosys and TCS to PSUs like Coal India and Balmer Lawrie, and mid-caps like Neuland Laboratories, MCX, and Whirlpool of India. His writing approach is data-first: every article anchors on NSE/BSE filings, analyst consensus estimates (revenue, PAT, EBITDA margins), 52-week price context, and YoY/QoQ comparisons — giving retail investors the same structured framework institutional desks use before an earnings event. He combines SEO-optimised structure with rigorous data sourcing, ensuring each preview ranks for investor search intent while meeting SEBI editorial standards. All articles are reviewed by Univest's in-house equity research team, led by Ankit Jaiswal, Senior Equity Research Analyst, to meet SEBI editorial standards.

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