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Wednesday, 28 March 2012 01:14 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Reuters: The rupee closed marginally firmer on Tuesday on exporter dollar conversions and inflows from worker remittances, and as April seasonal importer demand declined to ease depreciation pressure, dealers said.
The rupee inched up to close at 129.80/130.00 a dollar from Monday’s close of 130.00/130.10. It hit a record low of 131.60 on 19 March, mainly due to importer demand for greenbacks for the upcoming April festive season.
Dealers see the rupee gaining now that pre-festival import demand is declining, and dollar supplies are growing as exporters convert to pay holiday bonuses and expatriate workers send home money for relatives to spend during the festival.
The rupee has fallen 12 per cent since the Central Bank stopped defending a specific price on 9 February.
The stock market meanwhile slipped in thin volume as many investors remained cautious of rising interest rates, the rupee’s volatility and an expected fall in overall profits.
The main share index edged down 0.11 per cent or 5.96 points to 5,425.
The day’s turnover was Rs. 578.6 million ($ 4.45 million), well below last year’s daily average of 2.3 billion. Volume was 30.7 million. Last year’s daily average was a record 102.7 million.
Foreign investors were net buyers of 25.4 million on Tuesday, extending the net foreign inflow so far this year to Rs. 20.1 billion ($ 154.56 million) worth of shares so far this year, after a net outflow of 19.1 billion last year.
The Colombo Bourse is one of the worst performers this year among Asian markets, with a 10.7 per cent loss.