India's forex reserves drop further, by $2.7 billion to $687 billion in latest week

Business Monday 17/November/2025 14:14 PM
By: ANI
India's forex reserves drop further, by $2.7 billion to $687 billion in latest week

New Delhi: India's foreign exchange reserves declined by $2.699 billion in the week that ended November 7 to $687.034 billion, driven by a slump in both foreign currency assets and gold reserves, the Reserve Bank of India's latest 'Weekly Statistical Supplement' data showed.

Over the past month, the forex kitty has been in a downtrend, except for one week.

Still, the country's foreign exchange (forex) kitty is hovering close to its all-time high of $704.89 billion, reached in September 2024.
For the reported week (that ended November 7), India's foreign currency assets (FCA), the largest component of foreign exchange reserves, stood at $562.137 billion, down $2.454 billion.

The RBI data showed that gold reserves currently stand at $101.531 billion, down $195 million from the previous week. The price of the safe-haven asset gold has been on a sharp uptrend over recent months, perhaps amid heightened global uncertainties and robust investment demand.

After the latest monetary policy review meeting, RBI had said that the country's foreign exchange reserves were sufficient to cover more than 11 months of merchandise imports.

Overall, India's external sector continues to be resilient, and the RBI remains confident of meeting its external obligations comfortably.
In 2023, India added around $58 billion to its foreign exchange reserves, contrasting with a cumulative decline of $71 billion in 2022.
In 2024, the reserves rose by a little over $20 billion.

So far in 2025, the forex kitty has cumulatively increased by about $37-38 billion, data showed.

Foreign exchange reserves, or FX reserves, are assets held by a nation's central bank or monetary authority, primarily in reserve currencies such as the US dollar, with smaller portions in the Euro, Japanese Yen, and Pound Sterling.

The RBI often intervenes by managing liquidity, including selling dollars, to prevent steep depreciation of the rupee. The RBI strategically buys dollars when the Rupee is strong and sells when it weakens.

India's currency rupee, may finally have bottomed out after a persistent weakness, according to Jefferies. In its latest GREED & fear report, the global financial services firm highlighted a "growing likelihood that the rupee has bottomed" following its months-long depreciation. The Indian currency, Jefferies noted in the report, has been "the worst performer year to date amongst major emerging market currencies," having declined 3.4 per cent in 2025 to trade near Rs 88.7 per US dollar.