India rupee inches higher; month-end dlr demand offsets inflows
FACTORS TO WATCH
 * Australian dlr slides to 4-yr low against greenback
 * Oil slump reverberates after Nigeria currency devaluation
 * ECB outlook lifts Europe shrs, Australian dlr sags
 * Foreign institutional investor flows 
 * For data on currency futures
* Rupee ends at 61.8450/8550 per dlr vs 61.86/87 on Tuesday
  
  * INR seen in 61.70 to 62.10 range until end of week -trader
  
  * Rate cut by India cbank may boost foreign fund flows, rupee
  
  The Indian rupee closed marginally stronger on Wednesday after being held in a  tight range as dollar inflows into the domestic share markets were offset by  demand for the greenback from importers looking to meet month-end commitments.
  Sentiment was also cautious ahead of the release of July-September economic  growth data on Friday and the Reserve Bank of India's monetary policy review on  December 2.India economic growth probably slowed to 5.1 percent in the  July-September quarter from a year ago, but economists polled by Reuters  doubted whether that would be enough to persuade the central bank to cut  interest rates just yet. "We are likely to see the rupee in a 61.70 to  62.10 range this week as rising dollar demand towards month-end may hurt the  rupee," "Rupee resistance has now gradually shifted to 61.50 from  60.00 earlier as we see good dollar buying from exporters and the RBI at that  level. We are likely to see the rupee remaining broadly stable between 61.50 to  62.50 until year-end," he added. The partially convertible rupee closed at  61.8450/8550 per dollar versus Tuesday's close of 61.86/87. Moves in the  domestic share market will also be crucial for cues on foreign fund flows.  Shares gained for a fourth session in five, led by blue chips on hopes the  central bank would cut its key policy rate. In the offshore non-deliverable  forwards market, the one-month contract was at 62.20 while the three-month was  at 62.73.
  
  
  
