When India last faced a currency crisis, then central bank governor Raghuram Rajan used his inauguration address on September 4, 2013, to outline a series of measures to support the rupee and commit to restore macroeconomic stability and confidence. It was a defining moment, as the rupee reversed its slide thereafter.
Investors are hoping Sanjay Malhotra, who has led the RBI for 18 months now, will leave his own mark on history by taking a leaf out of Rajan's book.
The rupee has fallen about 6% since the start of 2026, after a 5% decline last year, pressured by higher oil prices and sustained foreign investor outflows.
Several steps to raise dollars — from tapping the diaspora to incentivising overseas fundraising by companies — have been mooted, but few firm announcements have followed even as the Iran war stretches into its fourth month.
"There is a need for a comprehensive BOP (Balance of Payments) package," Soumya Kanti Ghosh, chief economist at State Bank of India, said in a note.
The RBI so far has remained non-committal, although Malhotra last week took an ex-ECB chief Mario Draghi-like stance, saying the central bank would do “whatever is required” to ensure orderly moves in the forex market, while arguing that the rupee is now undervalued.
The need to restore confidence in its policies towards the rupee has been heightened by early missteps.
The RBI’s abrupt curbs in February on banks’ net positions in the non-deliverable forwards market — aimed at cracking down on speculation — unsettled foreign investors so much that the central bank rolled them back partially, in a rare such instance.
“Clear communication on exchange-rate management, giving confidence to foreign institutional investors that there will be no ad hoc measures…, and matching the communication with action is important,” said Smita Roy Trivedi of the National Institute of Bank Management, speaking in a personal capacity.
She said raising short-term interest rates and encouraging dollar deposits could help, although a weaker rupee could also act as an automatic stabiliser by curbing imports.