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RTRS:Indian rupee pulls back after suspected RBI intervention
 
* Suspected intervention pulls rupee back from day's lows
* Domestic equities end down 0.9 percent
* Month-end dollar buys from oil companies, defence payouts
* Rupee seen at 52/dlr end of Q1 2012 - BNP Paribas

(Updates to close)
By Archana Narayanan
MUMBAI, Dec 28 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee bounced back to close
higher on Wednesday after suspected central bank intervention, but global risk
aversion meant the Indian currency would remain under pressure in the near term,
dealers said.
Foreign funds have been pulling out of shaky stocks and oil refiners who
import about three-quarters of India's crude consumption have been heavy buyers
of dollars in recent sessions to meet month-end obligations.
The rupee closed at 53.07/08 to the dollar, after touching a low of
53.44 in the day. It was pulled back 0.6 percent from 53.30 levels towards the
end of the session after the suspected intervention. It closed at 53.015/025 on
Tuesday.
"Lots of selling from state-run banks was seen at around 53.30 ... it has to
be the RBI, no one else would sell like this," a senior dealer with a foreign
bank said.
In recent sessions RBI has imposed curbs on banks' trading limits to help
rein in speculation on the currency, which hit a record low of 54.30 on Dec.15,
were also keeping volumes low in the local forex market, they said.
For details of steps taken by the Reserve Bank of India to curb the rupee's
volatility and boost dollar inflows, see:
"It (RBI intervention) seems to have worked so far, but nobody's jumping to
buy the INR, just more cautious shorting it," said Chin Thio, senior FX
strategist, BNP Paribas in Singapore.
"(Rupee will remain weak for the) same reasons that brought it here - large
current account deficit, worsening fiscal deficit and capital outflows," Thio
said, who sees rupee at 52 to the dollar at the end of first quarter 2012.
Indian shares shed 0.9 percent in thin trade on Wednesday, a day before
monthly derivatives contracts expiry, dragged by a sell-off in banks, on worries
over worsening asset quality and slowing credit growth.
"Equity outflows is causing problem in a market where sentiment is already
negative," a senior trader with a foreign bank said.
Traders said oil and defence related dollar buying was persistent during
the day.
Traders said the overall turnover in the dollar-rupee market has been lower
than the usual $2 billion to $3 billion in recent sessions given banks'
reluctance to take bulky positions ahead of the quarter end.
One-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoted at
52.97.
In the currency futures market, the most-traded near-month
dollar-rupee contracts on the National Stock Exchange, the MCX-SX and the United
Stock Exchange traded around 53.50, with the total volume at $3.4 billion.
Source