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IMF’s new tag on India’s exchange-rate regime raises fresh questions on RBI’s FX strategy as the rupee hits new lows, says veteran trader Venkat Thiagarajan.


Rajesh Mahapatra, ex-Editor of PTI, has deep experience in political and economic journalism, shaping media coverage of key events.
November 28, 2025 at 8:18 AM IST
India’s exchange-rate framework is back under scrutiny after the International Monetary Fund described the rupee’s regime as a crawl-like peg, sharpening its assessment of how actively the Reserve Bank of India has been managing the currency. The reclassification comes at a time when the rupee has slipped to record lows, adding to concerns about how tightly India is holding the exchange rate.
Veteran forex trader Venkat Thiagarajan, who has spent more than three decades tracking the currency, says the IMF’s tag reflects the sheer scale of intervention, which he believes now shapes the rupee’s daily range more than macro fundamentals. According to him, the pattern increasingly resembles a “caged” exchange-rate system rather than a flexible float.
The shift carries implications beyond market mechanics. Exporters and importers have been working with thin margins and limited visibility, and many now say they cannot rely on macro signals alone because they expect the central bank to defend specific levels. When those levels break, volatility spikes and uncertainty rises.
Foreign investors, too, are recalibrating. Equity, debt and even FDI flows have softened since India was classified under a stabilised arrangement earlier this year, and Thiagarajan notes that assumptions of a 4% annual rupee depreciation plus hedging costs have dulled dollar-adjusted returns. The IMF’s latest observation is likely to amplify questions over transparency and the consistency of India’s inflation-targeting framework.
At the core of the debate are credibility and confidence—factors that Thiagarajan argues determine the currency’s long-term path as much as flows do. The divergence between stated policy and market practice, he says, has widened, and the rupee’s trading band has been inching higher in a way that reinforces expectations of a gradual depreciation bias.
Edited excerpts:
Q: The IMF has reclassified India’s exchange-rate regime as a crawl-like peg. What exactly did the Fund say, and what does it imply for the rupee?
Q: How does RBI’s intervention pattern influence this classification?
Q: Does this intervention help the broader economy?
Q: You argue that this complicates India’s inflation-targeting framework. Why?
Q: Exporters say the lack of clarity is increasing uncertainty. What are they experiencing?
Q: Where is the rupee headed? Is 90 likely?
Q: Does the IMF’s tag affect that credibility?
Q: How do foreign investors view dollar returns in this environment?
Q: If you were shaping policy, what would you do now?