The rupee mostly shrugged off Powell's signal of higher and possibly faster interest rate hikes, said Amit Pabari, managing director at CR Forex.
It is likely that foreign portfolio and investment flows were helping the rupee "have the upper hand among Asian currencies", Pabari said. He pointed out that Indian equities have received inflows of 140 billion rupees ($1.71 billion) this month compared with outflows in January and February.
In contrast to the rupee's performance this week, the Korean won declined 2% and the offshore Chinese yuan lost 1%. The dollar index is up 0.7% this week so far. The outlook for Asian currencies next week hinges on the U.S. jobs report due later in the day and the U.S. inflation data due next Tuesday.
Powell signalled this week that U.S. central bank's decision
to hike rates by 25 bps or 50 bps at March 21-22 meeting will
depend on incoming data.
($1 = 82.0320 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Nimesh Vora; editing by Eileen Soreng)