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INR

Infinity Natural Resources, Inc.

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r/investingSee Post

Looking for investment opportunities.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Infinite Money Glitch $INR $25K YOLO & DD

r/investingSee Post

What happens if you adjust the stock market for ALL the money printed by the Top 10 economies?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

What happens if you adjust the stock market for ALL the money printed by the Top 10 economies?

r/stocksSee Post

What happens if you adjust the stock market for ALL the money printed by the Top 10 economies?

r/investingSee Post

USD near ₹97 INR should investors actually be worried?

r/investingSee Post

Is this genuine Arbitrage opportunity or is there something I am missing

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Finally crossed $10K. Took longer than I’d like to admit, but here we are.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Finally crossed $10K. Took longer than I’d like to admit, but here we are.

r/stocksSee Post

Finally crossed $10K. Took longer than I’d like to admit, but here we are.

r/stocksSee Post

Gold in INR. 44 years. The same clock ticking.

r/StockMarketSee Post

A month Into The USA's War On Iran, Indian Investors Are Down By nearly ₹5 lakh crore.

r/StockMarketSee Post

🚨₹8,00,000 (INR) crore wiped out from Indian stock market today.

r/smallstreetbetsSee Post

Indian economy will nosedive in a week of crude oil keep going up 4-5% EVERYDAY ..where will govt bring money to subsidize...more taxes?

r/investingSee Post

18M, want my 20,000 (INR) to work. HELP!

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

India with trillions in above ground gold drops a bomb which can unlock gold pricing

r/investingSee Post

Looking for an angel investment

r/StockMarketSee Post

Markets are rallying

r/stocksSee Post

Became a Big FOOL and Lost 3.6 lakhs INR by investing in Nippon Gold ETF at ATH Price

r/optionsSee Post

Finally seeing some green - 1.4k profit from 22k account with my new strategy

r/investingSee Post

Need advice on MFs selection

r/optionsSee Post

India Looking for Options Strategy

r/optionsSee Post

Thoughts on Bank and broker selection.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Big pull out left a hole that needs fillings. INOR is about to take in new partners.

r/investingSee Post

How can I gift my 21‑year‑old son U.S. stocks from Dubai as an NRI?

r/investingSee Post

Need Help in starting an Investment as a Student

r/investingSee Post

Investing in non US stocks, using non-US currency, as an American citizen

Mentions

Ioneer Signs MOUs with KIND and Hyundai Engineering to Advance Rhyolite Ridge Lithium-Boron Project https://wcsecure.weblink.com.au/pdf/INR/03108933.pdf https://preview.redd.it/jdwqvau7iwbh1.jpeg?width=706&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=a3deab68947c270e0f64269265c0c29653ad8173

Mentions:#KIND#INR

They just have a ton of debt due to acquisitions so thats likely why the stock has been down so much. Riskier bet than INR

Mentions:#INR

True, but Reddit hasn’t had the open market insider transactions INR has had. Most of theirs have been sales while INR is buying. CFO did sell but that was back in March at $17 and right after a conversion.

Mentions:#INR

I have 25% of my monthly salary INR converted to 100 dolars, should I buy some?

Mentions:#INR

I have 25% of my monthly salary INR converted to 100 dolars, should I buy some?

Mentions:#INR

Man... I was losing money in INR and now I am losing money in USD.

Mentions:#INR

It's INR

Mentions:#INR

Akki type in $ nor INR , and also full forms please

Mentions:#INR

| # | Ticker | Score | SQ | MO | TA | VAL | Name | Rec | |---|--------|-------|----|----|----|----|------|-----| | 1 | \*\*GRPN\*\* | 73/100 \`███████░░░\` | 34/35 | 24/30 | 10/20 | 5/15 | Groupon, Inc. | ⭐ STRONG BUY | | 2 | \*\*FIG\*\* | 52/100 \`█████░░░░░\` | 25/35 | 14/30 | 12/20 | 1/15 | Figma, Inc. | ✅ BUY | | 3 | \*\*SNAL\*\* | 52/100 \`█████░░░░░\` | 15/35 | 22/30 | 10/20 | 5/15 | Snail, Inc. | ✅ BUY | | 4 | \*\*HCWB\*\* | 45/100 \`████░░░░░░\` | 10/35 | 22/30 | 10/20 | 3/15 | HCW Biologics Inc. | 👀 WATCH | | 5 | \*\*QUCY\*\* | 42/100 \`████░░░░░░\` | 10/35 | 22/30 | 10/20 | 0/15 | Quantum Cyber N.V. | 👀 WATCH | | 6 | \*\*LCID\*\* | 42/100 \`████░░░░░░\` | 25/35 | 8/30 | 4/20 | 5/15 | Lucid Group, Inc. | 🔀 SQUEEZE WATCH | | 7 | \*\*PROK\*\* | 37/100 \`████░░░░░░\` | 26/35 | 5/30 | 6/20 | 0/15 | ProKidney Corp. | 🔀 SQUEEZE WATCH | | 8 | \*\*INR\*\* | 36/100 \`████░░░░░░\` | 11/35 | 2/30 | 8/20 | 15/15 | Infinity Natural Res | 👀 WATCH | | 9 | \*\*HUBC\*\* | 35/100 \`████░░░░░░\` | 20/35 | 2/30 | 8/20 | 5/15 | Hub Cyber Security L | 🔀 SQUEEZE WATCH | | 10 | \*\*ALP\*\* | 35/100 \`████░░░░░░\` | 5/35 | 20/30 | 10/20 | 0/15 | Alpha Compute Corp | 👀 WATCH |

Bad if it happens too suddenly, but the Fed is targeting 2% inflation and RBI is targeting 4-6% inflation, so even when everything is perfect, structurally INR will keep depreciating against USD. The anxiety is mostly psychological and because growing up we kept seeing "rupee fell" news stories and comments as if something horrible happened.

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

You’re probably underestimating how much currency assumptions are carrying the whole thesis. A lot of people look at USD/INR over the last 20 years and mentally convert that into guaranteed extra yield, but FX trends don’t move in straight lines for 30 years. The biggest thing missing is that this isn’t really arbitrage. It’s a macro bet on: * US rates staying attractive * INR continuing to weaken steadily * India not outperforming expectations structurally * Inflation differentials staying wide enough Also, a 30-year treasury at 5% is not fixed 9%. The 5% is fixed in USD terms. The INR return is variable because the FX component is variable. Another thing is inflation. If INR depreciates 4% annually, that’s often tied to India having higher inflation than the US. So your “extra return” may not actually translate into dramatically higher real purchasing power for someone living in India. The duration risk is also bigger than you make it sound. If rates move from 5% to 7%, a 30-year bond can get crushed mark to market. Yes, you can hold to maturity, but psychologically and practically, locking up capital for decades in a deeply underwater bond is not trivial. There’s also reinvestment risk. Your coupons may not actually compound at attractive rates later. And politically, capital controls are not impossible in emerging markets. Not saying likely, but over 30 years, a lot can happen on taxation, remittance rules, treaty changes, reporting burdens, etc. I do agree with you on one thing though: for someone whose liabilities are in INR, owning USD assets can absolutely be a reasonable hedge. I just wouldn’t frame it as a near risk-free arbitrage. It’s more a long-duration currency + rates allocation that historically would’ve worked fairly well.

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Ok. Just want to understand how it is not arbitrage, given its an advantage trade for people who will be in India. It is a gap exposing inefficiency in the Indian central bank, implying real rates should currently be 9% to compensate for this gap vs. the current 7% offered. It would be like Yen trade, i can borrow at 7% in INR, invest in USD bond to get 9% in INR terms and pocket the 2%. Is that not arbitrage (assuming INR continues to weaken due to long standing structural problems in the country itself)

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

>Ok but for a person who is in India and will be in India, their concern will be in INDIAN Rupees only right as they will be spending in INR. You should care about more than INR if you're buying things that are imported or have imported components. Those will go up in price more in line with USD or a basket of currencies than the INR. alone.

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Yes, the person won't lose the principal if held to maturity. Realistically, the country India does not have anything going that can even remotely attract investors to even sustainably maintain or appreciate INR against USD. I think, even 50 years down the line, the USD if it exists will be worth more. India is structurally very weak and any chance of improvement is not gonna happen for 30 or even 50 years. Just maybe take a trip for 1 week to top Indian cities and you will understand. On the off chance the country wises up and turns it around, even then investors or people won't flock to it. They don't have any tech and dependent on imports for most things unlike the US or Europe where they have both tech , knowledge base and natural resources to capitalise on.

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Ok but for a person who is in India and will be in India, their concern will be in INDIAN Rupees only right as they will be spending in INR. They won't care what trumpcoin or turkish lira is doing unless they travel outside. This is literally a currency arbitrage opportunity, which will close if the Central bank of the country raises the current rate from 7% to 9% to close the gap/

Mentions:#INR

Indian goverment just increased import tax on gold from 5 to 10%. The INR is doing so bad the government has to stop people from converting the currency to gold. Short the Indian rupee free money, more to come.

Mentions:#INR

US is an energy island. It is still the reserve currency vs INR which is getting weaker by the day. US ll be fine.

Mentions:#INR
r/smallstreetbetsSee Comment

account currency is INR

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

U got the commas wrong regard. Its 7,929,000 INR

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Is it good? Yes, in a clinical sense, that is the good tactic. However, we run into a problem where the stock has already plummeted significantly. It may not be stable enough in the long run to get back above your purchase price. This also plays into your approach to investing. If you look for the short term reward, you aren't looking at how a stock will do in a year. You don't know if they are circling the drain. When you have the intent of long-term investing, these things are on your mind when selecting your stocks, and as a result you are more likely to choose those that you think will grow long-term. Looking at rpsg ventures, the 1y graph of their growth isn't super great. The point you purchased is the highest spike they had. Looking at the 5 year chart, it has gone higher, but only a few times in 5 years. It sits more around 800 INR with a trend downward over time until something spikes. I don't know anything about the business, what deals, new developments might spikes a drive on their stock, or anything like that, and this is NOT stock advice, but you have two options, really: 1) cut bait and run, as some americans say. If the patterns hold up it will drift down the longer you wait (in the short term). 2) HODL, to steal a meme. In 2022, and a good portion through 2024, prices were 1000+ INR. You are not likely to make any more than that (IMO), as the long-term trends for this stock don't seem to grow much. Long-term, wait for the price to get back to 900-1000. Decide in your mind what you would "settle" for losing. What would you take for a loss just to offload this, and aim for that as a ballpark. Looking at the graphs -- and again I can't emphasize enough I don't know any details about this company -- it could be a few months or over a year before that point comes back around.

Mentions:#INR#HODL
r/investingSee Comment

I really can't answer your question, I can only speak for myself - I am a "buy and hold" investor. Most of my money is in index funds - broad funds like the SP500. I don't know what the equivalent would be in another country as you mentioned your currency is the INR (Indian Rupee). Before I invest in individual companies like RSPG, I would do a LOT of research into their financials and speak to a more knowledgeable person than myself if it's a good buy. Looking at their chart, it does not seem that RSPG is a good long term buy. If you'd bought a year ago, you'd be about even today - basically made no gains. If you'd have bought FIVE years ago, you'd be doing quite well. At Rs. 1152, you bought at the top of the market. It's had a spike in stock price recently and that may have excited people into buying - that kind of emotional buying is what you want to avoid. Looking at the FIVE year chart, it seems RSPG goes through long periods of downswings so it could be a few years before it hits Rs. 1152 again - and at that point, you'd essentially be at Rs. 0 gain. All this is not a guarantee. It's just my amateur analysis from looking at the stock chart for a few minutes. Whether you sell now or hold on for the next year or two or four is really up to you. There is no guarantee when the stock will recover. If you sell at a loss, maybe you can deduct the loss on your taxes? I do not know how the tax system works in your country - in the United States, there is a tax advantage to taking a loss but it's also complicated.

Mentions:#INR#RSPG#LOT
r/stocksSee Comment

Really barely down ? 84K of sensex in 24 is not same as 74K of sensex in 26. INR depreciated by 15 %. Markets down by 15 % .... What we see now is 30 % crash in market as of 26 from 24 highs.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

https://glenmarkpharma.com/gpl_pdfs/media/PR_Glenmark%20Pharmaceuticals%20launches%20GLIPIQ%E2%93%87.pdf INR 325 = USD 3.5 weekly cost This is the retail price

Mentions:#PR#INR
r/investingSee Comment

USD has appreciated compared to the INR, does that mean we have had deflation? No, of course not. So stop acting like it's inflation the other way.

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

My mistake I should’ve clarified earlier. I was referring to INR, not USD.

Mentions:#INR
r/StockMarketSee Comment

Prob Euro/CNY/INR/JPY. Will depend on country buying and selling. Given currency controls doesn’t make much sense to price everything in CNY.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

INR

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

> The biggest culprit is currency depreciation. If you look at Indian indices like the Nifty 50 in local currency, the returns are actually massive. But US-listed ETFs have to convert those Rupees back to Dollars, and the Rupee has consistently lost value against the USD over the last decade. That currency bleed eats up a huge chunk of your gains. > > India's inflation target is 4% and the USA's is 2% I believe - maybe 2.5%. India has a much higher GDP growth rate, and also, a much lower debt/GDP than the USA. But for some reason, India's currency keeps depreciating faster than what I would have guessed. I would have guessed that it should depreciate by 2% a year (since 4% Indian inflation - 2% American inflation = 2% depreciation rate of the INR).

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Great question about the India GDP-to-market returns gap. The short answer: currency depreciation and valuation multiples matter more than many realize. Here's what's happening. The rupee depreciated roughly 25% against the dollar over that same 10-year window. For US-based investors holding INDA or similar ETFs, currency headwinds ate a significant chunk of INR-denominated returns. Additionally, Indian markets trade at higher P/E ratios than the US (often 22-25x versus S&P's historical 18-20x), which means GDP growth doesn't always translate linearly into earnings growth when you're already paying a premium. Another factor: dividend yields in India are lower (\~1-1.5%) compared to the S&P (\~1.5-2%), and there's been more capital dilution through secondary offerings as companies raise funds for expansion. For broad Indian exposure, I'd look at: * INDA (iShares MSCI India ETF) - what you mentioned, solid liquidity * INDY (iShares India 50 ETF) - top 50 companies, lower expense ratio * Direct investing via platforms that support NSE/BSE if you want to avoid currency conversion costs

r/stocksSee Comment

Sorry for hijacking the thread with my question, but if I'm converting from INR, should I convert to USD and buy on US exchange or buy EUR and invest in Irish-domiciled US funds? 'Cuz I've heard that the US estate tax kicks in at 60,000 USD and I'm likely to exceed that threshold. The platform I invest through is IBKR.

Mentions:#INR#IBKR
r/pennystocksSee Comment

You'll find people whining about the government, etc. But the reality is that INR is managed by the Reserve Bank of India. It is kept weak to encourage exports. The exact extent depends on the movement of USD and CNY.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Lol, no self promotion + the reason this loses money is because INR depreciates rapidly. Would be better to hold USD at 0%.

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

India market is controlled by SEBI (like US SEC), they are very conservative on companies, regulated. Unlike here in USA, wildness is less. There is one catch, USA when IPOs comes of founder's stake is less (say less than 25%), but in india founder may hold even 75% and they run the company. Mostly, the companies have tie-ups or founders from European or USA experienced Indians. If you can collect data and work with DCF methodlogy, Indian companies growth are better, however currency is always getting devalued against USD. I have seen USD to INR from INR 8/USD to now INR 92/USD last 40 years. Another aspect, it is not easy to open investment account from abroad (too many compliance requirement and impossible to retailers). Other than this, my old friends are invested in mutual funds and even gained 35% YOY CAGR. Last 5 years had been phenomenal growth in India and next five to ten years may have good growth. If you are in USA or EUROPE, better to invest in US ADRs like **NFTY**, INDA, INDY and **FLIN** to protect currency fluctuation. The bold two are better than other twos. Good Luck and Happy investing.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Yup. I had to check like a dozen currencies before I found one that isn't way up against the USD. Hope you want to visit India, the greenback is still pretty strong against INR. Tanzanian shillings are also pretty weak, maybe we can afford a safari.

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Last five years, economy boomed, as Indian government freed ( previously restricted) 100% foreign direct investment with one condition that manufacturing must be done inside Indian territories. Some Local mutual funds gained 35% CAGR , but risk is in USD to INR conversion devaluation. Best way is to invest in US ETFs like FLIN, INDY, NFTY for USD holdings.

r/investingSee Comment

I do not know where you are from, US or UK or elsewhere? If you are in foreign country (even if Indian citizen) earning other than INR, better to invest ETFs like INDA ([iShares MSCI India ETF](https://www.ishares.com/us/products/239659/ishares-msci-india-etf)) or similar so that USD to INR **currency devaluation** is protected and you pay tax here (in USA - assuming you are in USA).

r/stocksSee Comment

INR depreciation eats away at returns for US dollar or euro investors so they look down on Indian equities. It will stay that way until India becomes energy independent which won’t happen this decade as the grid isn’t ready for a solar energy ecosystem despite whatever headline numbers the government keeps reporting. Dependency on oil and coal imports means US dollar demand will be greater than INR demand especially as Indian exports struggle against Chinese and now Vietnamese exports.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

It’s concerning to see the dollar weakening against other major currencies while the INR continues to fall. I’m also exploring gold as a hedge against USD risk. Curious—are you investing primarily in individual stocks or ETFs?

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Someone I know gets Netflix for a year from india for 200 INR. He lives in Canada now. Everyone worried should just do that lol.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

If someone wants easiest play of their life, bet that INR will hit 100 relative to USD. The dog shit fonance minister only thinks of competing with china on exports by devaluing INR, not by producing anything of value.

Mentions:#INR
r/stocksSee Comment

usd vs inr and eur vs inr shows how much even INR has lost now

Mentions:#INR
r/stocksSee Comment

Good luck with that, both are devaluing even faster than USD. At least INR definitely is. RBI can keep on selling USD. The whole South Asia thing is hyped up more, Russia is a dead country, Ind and China can nevee be friends, they can do as many photoshoots they want but world knows 'How China supports Pak on terror front as well'...

Mentions:#INR
r/StockMarketSee Comment

It is the symbol for the Indian Rupee (INR) 😁, but not quite popular. Most people still just use INR when they want to refer to the currency

Mentions:#INR
r/stocksSee Comment

Crash or not, AI bubble or not, I am investing more and more in US market. I primarily invest in Indian stock market, but now shifting a good amount to US stock market(30% portfolio) to tech companies as well as some fast growing QC companies too for next 15 years. INR depreciation PLUS 15% growth in these kind of companies over long term is gonna be superbly amazing for my financial future. And even if crash or bubble burst happnes, I will be putting more money rather than taking out money in fear. So, I would say, this is amazing period to be an investor in US stock market. Just invest in high quality companies , or just invest in QQQ, for next 15-20 years and huge wealth creation will be there.

Mentions:#INR#PLUS#QQQ
r/investingSee Comment

In Feb, this year I onboarded a wealth manager and they have just been investing my money in MFs. I was previously investing my money myself and was already doing it in MFs but they just converted Direct MFs to Regular MFs. I was investing in stocks (India and US) as well but with them the strategy is just MFs. I want to know if I am being too bullish to expand my portfolio or i have the wrong wealth manager. I am 26 years old with no ancestral wealth and have the capacity to invest almost 70K INR monthly. I want my money to grow. I have a high risk appetite.

Mentions:#INR
r/StockMarketSee Comment

To the OP, please mention that you are using the Indian Numbering system and INR currency in your post. We can't tell you whether to hold or sell. **Here is some analysis of this company:** \--------------------------- The company's recent financial performance shows significant challenges. * **Quarterly Loss**: The company reported a loss of **₹100.35 crore** for the quarter ending June 30, 2025, following three consecutive profitable quarters. * **Negative Earnings**: The Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio is **-33.58**, and the trailing twelve months Earnings Per Share (EPS) is **-₹1.15**, indicating negative profitability. * **Declining ROE**: The company has shown a consistently declining Return on Equity (ROE) over the last five years. The stock has a "Neutral Outlook" with an overall score of **4 out of 10**. # Shareholding Pattern (June 2025) * **Promoters**: 44.14% * **Promoter Pledge**: 45.37% of promoter holdings are pledged. * **Foreign Institutional Investors (FII)**: 2.89% * **Domestic Institutional Investors (DII)**: 0.00% * **Others (Retail, etc.)**: 52.97%

Mentions:#INR#ROE
r/StockMarketSee Comment

\> [Starship\_Albatross ](https://www.reddit.com/user/Starship_Albatross/)• [2d ago](https://www.reddit.com/r/StockMarket/comments/1nrtzlg/comment/nghjpbm/) \> 3,05,004.52 ?? did you mistype when you made this? The number is correct, yes, it is in [ISN](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_numbering_system) Amounts are in INR.

Mentions:#INR
r/pennystocksSee Comment

This is NOT a Penny stock, you regard INR940 is around USD10.60 Read the damn rules for once before spamming your ticker

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Hey, I’m a recent college graduate in India. I’m 21. I would like to get into investing and start from now so that I can hopefully have a passive income in the future. I can only invest a thousands in INR every month for now. How should I start?

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Totally agreed. In long run, if things remain same, surely the dollar would come under US’s own fiscal pressure. But the challenge is what’s the alternative - none of the BRICS by themselves are not there yet. Yen is non free float, INR is non convertible etc. But a new currency backed by some other asset could be a solid alternative for trade. Do remember China is now the biggest trading partner of almost 90% of countries globally. If this new currency takes off, USD will get under immense pressure. Fed will find it difficult to print dollars and manage its debt

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

FWIW, here’s how I’d go about it: - 50% in European Large-Cap Equities ETF: Track broad European stocks. Use Vanguard FTSE Europe UCITS ETF (ticker: VGK on Euronext, but confirm UCITS version; expense 0.08%). This captures EU growth from fiscal stimulus (e.g., defense spending up 50% in 2025 outlooks, banks +28%). - 20% in European Small-Cap Equities ETF: For higher growth potential (small caps historically outperform large by 2-3% annually). Use iShares MSCI Europe Small-Cap UCITS ETF (IEUS; expense 0.40%). Focuses on undervalued EU small firms (e.g., tech/manufacturing in Germany/Netherlands). - 20% in Emerging Markets ex-US ETF: Growth from Asia/LatAm/Africa. Use iShares Core MSCI Emerging Markets UCITS ETF (EMIM; expense 0.18%). Excludes US/China-risks; emphasizes India/Southeast Asia for 4-6% expected returns. Accepts currency fluctuation (e.g., INR/EUR swings ~15% historically). - 10% in Euro-Denominated Bonds ETF (10k €): For stability and income (2-3% yield). Use iShares Euro Government Bond UCITS ETF (IEGA; expense 0.15%). Tracks safe EU sovereign bonds (e.g., German/French); low volatility, shields from equity dips. Do an annual review and rebalance; sell if any asset deviates >5%.

r/StockMarketSee Comment

I can't because the MSCI Indices are all denominated in USD. It's the most relevant anyway for US-based investors, because when I buy a MSCI World ex-USA or Emerging Markets IMI index, I don't get a bunch of EUR, CNY, JPY, GBP, CAD, INR, TWDetc., I get my +22% or +18% YTD returns in USD. No point dividing by local currency exchange rate just to multiply it back. You can invest in these in your local currency if you're a non-US investor, but the relative performance would be the same.

Mentions:#MSCI#INR
r/investingSee Comment

How to tell someone ISN'T an institutional investor? They know fukall about Cable, £/Euro, £/INR, hell £ just about any currency over the last year. Muppet.

Mentions:#INR
r/StockMarketSee Comment

The INR has gotten weaker even since these announcements and all the brics members hate each other Trump might be useless but brics will never be a functional organisation lol

Mentions:#INR
r/StockMarketSee Comment

That's just delulu logic. The increase in trade on India's part is largely in oil. The Indian military's dependence on Russian defense equipment has been steadily declining over the decades for example. Oil is a globally traded commodity. When the Europeans decided to shut out Russian oil, they jumped on OPEC/ME oil, the EU and the US were perfectly fine with India taking russian oil on the cheap and buying refined products from India instead. This would starve the Russia of Forex (because India paid them in INR/AED/CNY), reduce their revenue and also keep global oil markets stable and keep a check in inflation. And this after the US decided to sanction Iranian/Venezuelan oil. If you want to point to large/unjustifiable increase in trade, then you need to look at Turkey, Kazakhstan, Georgia, Azerbaijan etc. A lot of western goods (including dual use materials) are being funneled into Russia through these countries. EU/US haven't done anything to actually stop this. You can't have your cake and eat it too.

Mentions:#EU#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

And paying in INR, or was for a while.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

It's an Indian broker - IndMoney I mean fair, opportunities come at a cost. US/INR should offset the cost though....hopefully.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

It's because of government policies and tech bro trend, 1. Indian's are allowed to send money abroad only 250k USD per year. After 12k USD (10M INR), 20% TCS applies. It heavily discourages one from participating in foreign markets. 2. Indian's are forbidden from trading Futures, Options, Forex in foreign markets. It's banned by law. 3. Crypto is not banned. However heavily taxed, sometimes mistakenly taxed for turnover rather than profit. In some cases you need to pay certain percentage of contested tax amount for appealing your case. 4. Gambling is banned in certain indian states. Gambling abroad is forbidden. You can't send money abroad for Gambling legally. If you gamble legally in India, you need to pay 30% taxes, can't set off against losses. Flat 30% + CESS, surcharge 5. That being said Income from Future&Options is "business income", can be offset against losses. Also follows standard tax slabs from 5% to 30%. 6. Doing business in India is tough due to various legal hurdles. So doing F&O is precieved to be simpler than starting a business. Actually it is. However maintaining winning steak is tough. Financial Influencer somehow sold this concept. But good thing is even a person in a remote village is investing. Nowadays some brides ask "do you do SIP in Mutual Funds" to get married with groom. Gambling is an universal emotion. If you make it harder for people, they are gonna find another way. - Hail retards, degens

Mentions:#INR
r/StockMarketSee Comment

This is basically the exact opposite of reality. Look at other charts, USD to RMB, USD to INR. It's only problematic if you are a company that imports from Eurozone to sell elsewhere and don't hold European currencies, which almost all that do that would do. If you are dealing in any item that is generally denominated in dollars, so all the largest non-eu world economies. There's a reason EU interest rates are so low right now, and that's what's pushing this imbalance.

Mentions:#INR#EU
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Haha that’s sad. On the contrary, I’m an Indian citizen in US and the INR is falling against dollar and US stock market is at ATH! Win win for me😅

Mentions:#INR

Countries are making deals but their currency is still depreciating. Look at the USD-INR chart or USD-YUAN chart. USD still better. If u had to compare USD theb maybe comlare it with Gold or BTC.

Mentions:#INR#BTC
r/optionsSee Comment

Been actively trading options for over 6 years now. My most successful strategies? Directional spreads in momentum markets, straddles during event-driven volatility, and systematic credit spreads in consolidation phases.I pivoted from naked options to defined-risk plays after realising how skewed the risk-reward was. I follow sector rotation, OI shifts, and global risk sentiment (VIX, INR/USD, US yields). For exits, I use ATR-based targets or IV crush zones post-event.The biggest game changer? Having a clear rule-based system, reviewing trades weekly, and attending strategy events to stay current.For anyone serious, I highly recommend the 5paisa Options Convention in Chennai,Pondicherry,Bangalore,Mysore,Hyderabad,Mumbai . It’s a great blend of veteran insights and real market application—not fluff. Here's the link: https://www.5paisa.com/blog/options-convention-2025-schedule

Mentions:#INR#ATR
r/StockMarketSee Comment

First of all, don't use AI to write a question... it's gay and obvious. To answer your question, the INR has tanked versus the USD this week, so the FX risk is even more elevated (INR is down 50% vs the USD since 2021). FDI does not like it's returns eaten up by exchange rates.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Convert to INR

Mentions:#INR
r/stocksSee Comment

The company I work for pays over INR 60,00,000 for engineers they hire in India. While all the consultancies pay at best INR 12-13,00,000. We get what we pay for

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

This is ... not how it's going to play out. The most important flaw here is that you're hanging a lot on "Market forces rebalance exchange rates to reflect all available trade between the two countries." But the US is not the only trading partner IN has - IN has the entire world to trade steel with, and so that means whatever adjustment the INR might see it will not wholly account for the cost change. Optimistically IN and the US customer will share the tariff cost, but the US customer is not going to still only pay 625... Additionally, you're not accounting for the adjustment to USD! As the USD falls, it doesn't just affect US ability to pay for IN steel, it also affects the ability for us to pay for all other products in the market, effectively increasing inflation broadly. Lastly, never forget that the intention of the tariff is not to devalue foreign currency, it was intended to eliminate trade imbalances. And the rates were calculated specifically based on the size of the trade imbalances. If the imbalance continues, what's to say that the rate won't just continue to rise? So, this won't be a "one time effect."

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

> Markets are forward looking, tariffs are going to be so immediately terrible that they will be rolled back, with or without Trump. In the past month, all you see here are comments like: * Empty shelves^tm * Prices will be 145% higher! * Runaway inflation * Experts agree tariffs are bad^tm * The GDP is going to collapse! Reality: 1. *If currencies are permitted to float freely, devaluations largely nullify the effect of tariffs and transfer costs to the targeted country. * Example: *No tariffs:* An Indian steel producer charges 50,000 INR for 1 ton of steel. Exchange rate: 1 USD = 80 INR (hypothetical for simplicity). Cost in USD: 50000 INR / 80 INR/USD = $625 *20% Tariffs:* The steel's value is $625 so the tariff is $125/ton. New cost to US buyer: $625 + $125 = $750 Indian producer receives 50,000 INR, US govt receives $125. US buyer pays $125 more per ton. Note: the above is the simplistic narrative which is pushed on social media (and regular media for that matter) *20% tariffs + free floating currency* Indian steel is less competitive in the US. Market forces rebalance exchange rates to reflect all available trade between the two countries. Assume: INR devalues by 20% to restore competitiveness (hypothetical, usually it's not that clean and doesn't fully offset the effect of tariffs) New exchange rate: 1 USD = 96 INR (20% devaluation) Indian producer still charges $625 to the US customer, but now receives 60,000 INR Note that the tariff represents a point-in-time step change (a shock), not a change in the second derivative of prices, so it has no permanent effect on inflation. Also note that the burden of the tariff is now shifted to India. The producer receives 60,000 INR (up from 50,000) but the devalued rupee means that their purchasing power abroad is weaker. Pre-devaluation, 50,000 INR could buy $625 worth of imported US goods, and now it requires 60,000 INR. Taken collectively, this means that India now pays more for foreign goods and inflation may rise if import dependency is high (not great news for China, btw). As for the US consumer, once they get over the initial tariff shock, it's behind them. The US economy is less affected as the buyer's cost is offset by tariff revenue and policy measures. For instance, if consumers pay 1% higher prices but receive a 10% tax cut, they have come out ahead. 2. *The effects of tariffs are heavily dependent on many factors*, such as relative industry sizes, availability of substitutions, supply chain reshoring, corporate and individual tax regulations, and subsidies to name a few 3. *Tariffs are unlikely to contribute to inflation* as they have a one-time impact and the secondary effects are amplified for net exporters 4. Per point 1, a major caveat is that Chinese currency manipulation by the PBOC prevents the natural rebalancing from occurring (though they pay for it in other ways). However, *it is possible to unilaterally replicate the effect of currency devaluation* through cuts to corporate tax rates and consumption taxes. 5. Prior to tax breaks, the net one-time impact of tariffs is small, about 0.8-2.5% (many analysts estimate this at well under $2000/family of four per year). After tax breaks and underappreciated secondary effects (such as lower oil prices), it is conceivable this may be neutral or even put cash back in the average person's wallet. You may deduce from the above that the impact to GDP is likely to be far less than the fearmongers suggest. Factor in stimulation measures such as deregulation and foreign investment incentive packages, and the case for this being a highly successful economic restructuring becomes much more sound. Some examples of recent EOs and announcements: * Unleashing American Energy (January 20, 2025) * Immediate Measures to Increase American Mineral Production (March 20, 2025) * Unleashing America's Offshore Critical Minerals and Resources (April 24, 2025) * Fast-Track Permitting for Energy and Mining (Announced April 25, 2025) * Coal Industry Revival (April 8, 2025) * Memorandum on Deregulation Without Public Input (April 10, 2025) * America First Investment Policy (February 21, 2025) - eases CFIUS reviews for allied countries and expedites environmental reviews for projects over $1B, while restricting Chinese investments in strategic sectors Deregulation is a very big deal and highly stimulative. Also consider some of the foreign investment packages which have been announced. * Apple: $500B * Softbank: $100B * TSMC: $100B * UAE: $1.4T (wut) over 10 years to sustain investments in AI, semiconductors, energy and US manufacturing * Nvidia: $200B * Eli Lilly: $27B * Hyundai: $20B * J&J: $55B The current announcements amount to over $7 trillion in private and foreign investments, though I would not expect all pledges to materialize. So here's the point. Nobody can tell the future, but if you bought into the tariffs = doom narrative, I can assure you that there is much more complexity here than you probably know. FWIW I make my living from the markets and have done so for some time. My own models put the actual risk of a recession at ~30%, while the odds of a soft-landing (or even very significant growth) are currently at ~60%.

Mentions:#INR#PBOC#UAE
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

I hire people for a global company, and mid-senior level app devs from India are earning around $50k USD (in INR) including provident fund (retirement) contributions and bonus.

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

I am in this comment and I don’t like it lmao Real story. I started investing with just 100k INR (~1200 USD) as an experiment. Made 15k with DD and then lost 20k and then made some to end at 103k INR. Brokerage and charges paid 8k INR

Mentions:#INR#DD
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

The PetroDollar has been fading. India has been paying INR to Russians for nearly 3 years now, and they just smile and do that damned Indian headshake when America questions them about it. Q4 of 2024, Saudi Arabia publicly said they would consider receiving Yuan for payment. They are an OPEC leader.

Mentions:#INR

One thing to note is that in USD terms the comparison would be different. Accounting for USD-INR conversion, the performance would be around 130% as INR has depreciated around 13% in last 5 years.

Mentions:#INR
r/stocksSee Comment

You get 85 INR for 1 USD. It doesn't mean it's 80% discount

Mentions:#INR
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

Would INR depreciation affect anything other than imports like luxury goods and oil?

Mentions:#INR
r/investingSee Comment

Russell 2000 crashed too. Gold also went down. Single stock bluechips weren't exempt from the decline and many went into correction territory if not outright 52-week lows. BTC, cryptos, and NFTs crashed and got BTFO. Let's not forget the 2019-2022 class of IPOs from LYFT to INR got BTFO. SPACs from BEACH to SPCE got BTFO. Collectables market from watches to trading cards got BTFO. ***Oh also ALL the bonds got BTFO.*** <--- This is the big one since the bond market is huge. And here have this guy saying *"2022 was a tech sector crash, it wasn't an everything crash."*. Clearly OP is right cause this guy doesn't remember shit. Tech JOBS were crashing but the tech titans held up well. AAPL fell from 175 to $135. DAL fell from $50 to $28. BLK from $950 to $550. TPR for $50 to $27.