Dollar Weaponisation and the Quiet Squeeze on Emerging Market Currencies
The Indian rupee's record lows reflect something larger than India's domestic challenges — a system that amplifies dollar strength at precisely the moment the world's most vulnerable economies can least absorb it.

The Indian rupee touched 96.4 against the dollar on Monday, extending a seven-session losing streak that has left the currency at an all-time low. No single event caused the fall. Rather, the decline reflects a confluence of pressures that have been building for months: a strong-dollar environment amplified by elevated US Treasury yields, persistent import demand that widens India's current account, and a Federal Reserve that shows no urgency to soften its restrictive stance. The result is a quiet but relentless squeeze on a currency used by the world's most populous nation — and a pattern repeating across the Global South.
This is not primarily a story about New Delhi's policy choices. It is a story about a monetary architecture that systematically amplifies dollar strength at the precise moment emerging economies are most exposed to it.
The Strong Dollar Machine
When the Fed raises rates, capital flows toward dollar-denominated assets. That is not controversial — it is textbook monetary mechanics. What gets less attention is the asymmetric cost of that mechanics. A US corporation borrowing in dollars faces cheaper financing conditions after a rate cycle than it did before. An Indian manufacturer borrowing in rupees faces a domestic rate environment shaped partly by the RBI's response to rupee depreciation, which often means higher domestic rates to defend the currency. The same monetary shock produces different outcomes depending on which side of the dollar divide a borrower sits.
The Indian Express reports the rupee has weakened for seven consecutive sessions. The sources do not confirm the specific drivers for this week's move, but the structural context is well documented: elevated US yields make dollar-denominated debt more attractive to hold, reducing appetite for emerging-market assets and pressuring EM currencies. This dynamic has persisted through most of 2025 and into 2026.
A Pattern Across the Emerging World
India is not an outlier. Brazil, Egypt, Nigeria, and Kenya have all seen their currencies under sustained pressure through the same period. The Egyptian pound has undergone multiple official devaluations. The Nigerian naira trades at a steep discount to its official rate. In each case, the trigger is different — capital flight, energy import costs, IMF programme constraints — but the amplifying mechanism is the same: dollar denominated debt obligations, import invoicing in dollars, and a global financial system that prices risk in one currency.
The structural point is straightforward: the dollar's reserve status means that when Washington adjusts rates or deploys sanctions, the shock is transmitted globally through a system that has no neutral gear. There is no alternative pricing layer for sovereign debt. There is no settlement mechanism that operates outside dollar clearance rails. The result is that monetary conditions in countries like India are partly determined by decisions made at the Federal Reserve, with little direct recourse.
India's Options and Their Limits
The Reserve Bank of India has tools. It can intervene in the forward market, draw down reserves, or raise rates to defend the rupee. Each carries a cost. Rate rises dampen investment and growth at a moment when India's economy requires expansion to absorb a large and growing workforce. Reserve depletion exposes the central bank to a loss of confidence signal that can accelerate the very outflows it is trying to prevent. Forward market intervention can buy time but does not alter the underlying differential between Indian and US rates.
What India cannot do, alone, is reshape the system that creates the pressure. That would require either a genuinely multipolar reserve architecture — a project that has been discussed since the 2008 financial crisis without material progress — or a managed dollar decline driven by a US policy pivot toward a weaker currency. Neither appears imminent.
The Stakes Beyond the Exchange Rate
Currency weakness is not an abstract macro statistic. A rupee that buys less means imported fuel costs more for households and freight costs more for manufacturers. It means the government faces a larger rupee cost for debt servicing on dollar-denominated obligations. It means inflation expectations become harder to anchor, which forces the RBI into a more restrictive posture than domestic conditions alone would require.
For India's 1.4 billion people, the exchange rate is not a financial market curiosity — it is the denominator through which global commodity prices enter household budgets. The seven-session streak that brought the rupee to 96.4 is, at root, a dispute over who bears the cost of a system in which one currency's strength is imposed on everyone else's currency. That dispute has no clean resolution within the rules as they currently exist.
Monexus coverage of this story foregrounded the structural asymmetry between reserve-currency issuers and sovereign borrowers — a dimension the wire tended to frame as a straightforward "currency weakness" narrative, obscuring the directionality of the pressure.