India’s Forex Reserves Climb To $688.94 Billion, Marking Second Straight Weekly Rise
India’s foreign exchange reserves increased by **1.689 billion dollars** to **688.94 billion dollars** in the week ended 12 December, as per the latest Weekly Statistical Supplement released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). This is the **second consecutive weekly rise** in the forex kitty, after a 1.03‑billion‑dollar increase in the previous week took reserves to 687.26 billion dollars.
Break-up: Gold And Currency Assets Lead Gain
RBI data show that **foreign currency assets (FCAs)**, the largest component of the reserves, rose by around **906 million dollars** to about **557.79 billion dollars** during the reporting week. Gold reserves recorded a strong uptick, climbing by roughly **758 million dollars** to **107.74 billion dollars**, reflecting both valuation gains and the central bank’s continued diversification of its reserve mix.
Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) edged up by about **10–14 million dollars** to nearly **18.74 billion dollars**, while India’s reserve position in the IMF also improved marginally to around **4.69 billion dollars**.
External Buffer Near Record Highs
At **688.94 billion dollars**, India’s forex reserves remain close to their historic peaks above the 700‑billion‑dollar mark seen in September, providing a substantial buffer against external shocks, currency volatility and short‑term capital flow reversals. The current level is comfortably sufficient to cover more than nine months of imports, according to recent estimates by analysts tracking India’s external metrics.
The build‑up in reserves comes after a period of sharp swings in global currency markets and commodities, during which the RBI has been actively intervening to smooth volatility in the rupee while also opportunistically adding to its stock of safe assets such as gold.
What It Means For Rupee And Economy
A stronger reserves position is widely seen as a sign of **external sector resilience**, supporting investor confidence and helping India secure favourable sovereign ratings and borrowing costs. Economists say the latest rise, backed by healthy foreign investment flows and stable macros, gives the central bank additional room to manage any sudden bouts of global risk‑off sentiment or oil‑price spikes without allowing disorderly moves in the rupee.
The RBI has reiterated that it does not target a specific rupee level but aims to maintain orderly conditions in the foreign exchange market, using its sizeable reserves as a key tool while ensuring that India’s growth and inflation outlook remains broadly on track.

