A man counts Indian currency notes at a market in Bengaluru, India, August 1, 2025. REUTERS
MUMBAI, May 5 (Reuters) – The Indian rupee slid to a record low on ​Tuesday after U.S.-Iranian strikes in ‌the Gulf rattled markets, dimming hopes for a resolution and deepening concerns over ​risks confronting the oil-importing economy.
The ​currency weakened to 95.39 per dollar, ⁠down 0.3% on the day, ​eclipsing its previous all-time low of ​95.33 hit on Thursday last week.
Oil-sensitive Asian peers such as the Indonesian rupiah and ​Philippine peso also weakened on ​Tuesday as the Gulf hostilities tested a fragile ‌truce ⁠and kept investors on edge.
Analysts reckon that an elongated conflict in the Middle East, which keeps energy ​prices elevated, ​would ⁠widen India’s current account deficit, slow growth and stoke ​inflation.
The economic worries have reflected ​in ⁠foreign portfolio outflows from Indian assets. Overseas investors have net sold ⁠over $20 ​billion worth of Indian ​stocks between March and May so far.

Reporting by ​Jaspreet Kalra, Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips