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Rupee flat in dull tradeREUTERS: The rupee ended flat on Monday as an early importer demand for the greenback was superseded by dollar selling by exporters, while dealers expect the currency to remain stable in the near term in the absence of a pick-up in private sector credit. The spot rupee ended at Rs. 130.59/61 per dollar from Friday’s close of Rs. 130.58/61. “There was not much of demand; this is the level it has been trading at for the last few weeks. The rupee is under appreciation pressure,” said a currency dealer asking not to be named. Many dealers said they were surprised by the lower credit demand from the private sector even though key interest rates have been at multi-year lows since January. The benchmark 91-day Treasury bill yield further dropped to its lowest since January 2007, data showed on Wednesday, a day after the Central Bank kept policy rates steady at multi-year lows. Private sector credit grew 4.4% year-on-year in February, the slowest since May 2010, latest data from the Central Bank showed. That compared with growth of 5.2% in January this year and 13.3% in February 2013. The Central Bank, in its monetary policy statement last week, expressed confidence that private sector credit growth would rebound in the second quarter and push up the pace of economic expansion. Dealers expect the rupee to trade in a range of Rs. 130.60-70 in the near future until credit growth picks up. It has been hovering between Rs. 130.55 and Rs. 130.70 since 3 March, Thomson Reuters data showed, with the Central Bank intervening to smoothen any sharp volatility. |