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Horn
5th May 2011, 04:02 PM
After having explored various options to make payments and having run out of them, India is understood to have decided to pay Iran for the crude oil supplied by it in rupee terms.

After discussions between the Finance Ministry and the Petroleum and Natural Gas Ministry, it has been decided that the Ministry will seek the note of the Union Cabinet to switch over to the rupee payment system for the Iranian crude, officials in the Petroleum Ministry said.

Under the newly floated but yet to be approved proposal, National Iranian Oil Co (NIOC) will open rupee account with Indian banks and could use the money to purchase non-strategic items such as railway imports and buy commodities. It will not be able to use the money to invest in India or for buying shares or companies. The Finance Ministry will prepare and submit a list of do's and don'ts for Iranian authorities from the money it gets as part of the crude oil payments.

The official said the Reserve Bank of India, which, in December last year, discontinued a long-standing mechanism of payment through central banks, previously opposed payments for Iranian oil in rupee but has now relented. In February, India started making euro payments through an Iranian bank based in Germany. But that had to be stopped soon after Germany came under pressure from the United States to put an end to this practice.

The government also explored the option of Indian oil firms opening accounts in Dubai-based Noor Islamic Bank for direct transfer of money to Iran. But the UAE is also learnt to have refused to route payments.

India imports 12 million barrels of crude oil every month from Iran, which is the nation's second-largest supplier, after Saudi Arabia. The problem began after the RBI, on December 23, did away with the Asian Clearing Union (ACU) mechanism for paying for Iranian crude oil imports, which make up for 12 per cent of the nation's oil needs.

In February, it began clearing past dues for Iranian oil imports by making euro payments through the German-based Europisch-Iranische Handelsbank AG (EIH Bank). But EIH, which is owned by Iran, is a banned entity in the U.S., and Washington persuaded Germany to stop payments.

This has resulted in outstanding payment of $2.8 billion as on March-end towards Iran.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article1989248.ece

Horn
5th May 2011, 04:07 PM
Rupee tumbles to 5-week low tailing shares, euro's retreat

(Reuters) - The rupee slid to a five-week low on Thursday, driven by negative shares, a pullback in the euro and weakness in most Asian currencies.

The partially convertible rupee ended at 44.76/77 per dollar, a level not seen since March 30 and 0.7 percent weaker from Wednesday's close of 44.465/475.

"If the 44.75 level is breached convincingly, the rupee may fall to 44.90," said Rohan Naik, head of foreign exchange trading at Standard Chartered Bank in Mumbai.

"Weakening trend in the Asian (currencies) is likely to continue for the week as equities are seen lower."

The BSE Sensex fell 1.4 percent on Thursday, extending a losing streak to nine sessions in a row, as worries over rising interest costs hurting corporate earnings kept investors on edge.

Robust dollar demand from importers also weighed on the rupee, traders said.

"There was a lot of dollar demand from oil companies from start of trade today," said a another foreign exchange dealer with a foreign bank.

Oil is India's biggest import item and domestic oil firms are the biggest purchasers of the U.S. unit in the local currency market.

The euro was at $1.4825 at end of trade in domestic forex market after rising to as high as $1.4899 earlier in the day, and off a 17-month high of $1.4940 hit on Wednesday.

This intraday uptick in the common European unit had provided solace to the rupee from the importer dollar demand, traders said.

The index of the dollar against six major currencies was up 0.1 percent at 73.090 points at end of local forex trade.

The one-month onshore forward premium was at 25.25 points versus 26.50 points at its previous close. The three-month was at 78.50 points from 82.75 points and the one-year was at 305.25 points compared with 322.25 points.

The one-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoted at 45.05, weaker than the onshore spot rate.

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 were 44.9700, 44.9750, 44.9650 respectively, with total volume at $9.56 billion.

http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/05/05/idINIndia-56797020110505

osoab
5th May 2011, 04:46 PM
India nuked by "Pakistan" in 3...2...1...

gunDriller
5th May 2011, 05:58 PM
India nuked by "Pakistan" in 3...2...1...


but India has demonstrated their loyalty to the Talmud worshippers by allowing the Mumbai incident to take place, thereby allowing India to enter the Promised Land of the War of Terror, alongside the Chosen Ones.

i thought they scored major brownie points with that.

on the other hand, the Pakistan ISI is mostly in US & Israeli hands too.

anyway, good for India. i don't know what Iran will buy with rupees - Tata cars maybe ?


actually, what Iran needs is oil refineries. can't believe a country that big doesn't have them.

Ponce
5th May 2011, 06:02 PM
The rupees is more trusted than the "petro" dollar......as a matter of fact, even the Cuban peso is more trusted than the dollar........one dollar = .89 Cuban centavos.

Horn
5th May 2011, 06:18 PM
but India has demonstrated their loyalty to the Talmud worshippers

Loyalty typically carries some just reward,

maybe India finally realized that having a nuclear 1/2 life is better than none at all...?

osoab
5th May 2011, 06:20 PM
India nuked by "Pakistan" in 3...2...1...


but India has demonstrated their loyalty to the Talmud worshippers by allowing the Mumbai incident to take place, thereby allowing India to enter the Promised Land of the War of Terror, alongside the Chosen Ones.

i thought they scored major brownie points with that.

on the other hand, the Pakistan ISI is mostly in US & Israeli hands too.

anyway, good for India. i don't know what Iran will buy with rupees - Tata cars maybe ?


actually, what Iran needs is oil refineries. can't believe a country that big doesn't have them.


Did India go along with Mumbai? I never studied the event.

They could be just trying to get the most for their rupee at the current point in time.

Horn
5th May 2011, 09:48 PM
They could be just trying to get the most for their rupee at the current point in time.


Its a global problem right now, large swaths of populations are getting very angry at their governments for still buying into the Yankee imperialist ponzi scheme.

All their toil goes down the tubes with such large dollar purchases.