Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Market Capitalization:2 406 093 621 228,7 USD
Vol. in 24 hours:94 943 274 881,35 USD
Dominance:BTC 58,86%
ETH:10,93%
Yes

Dollar/rupee slides sharply as oil prices tumble dramatically after the US‑Iran ceasefire agreement.

crypthub
Dollar/rupee slides sharply as oil prices tumble dramatically after the US‑Iran ceasefire agreement.

Currency Reaction

The USD/INR dropped to 82.45 after the US‑Iran ceasefire, giving the rupee its biggest one‑day gain in six months. Lower geopolitical risk lifted emerging‑market sentiment and cut India’s oil‑import costs. The RBI monitored the move but did not intervene.

Oil Market Shock

Brent fell 8.3% to $68.50, the sharpest slide since March 2020, as traders priced in resumed Iranian exports. WTI slid to $64.20 and insurance costs around the Strait of Hormuz fell, spurring a surge in oil‑futures trading. Trading volume in the USD/INR pair jumped 240% and Brent options open interest rose sharply.

Broader Economic Impact

Cheaper oil improves India’s current account by about 0.4% of GDP per $10 cut and eases fuel‑subsidy pressures. A stronger rupee, however, squeezes export‑oriented IT and pharma firms as dollar revenues convert to fewer rupees. The dollar index fell 0.6% while the real and rand rose, easing pressure on emerging markets.