How Venezuela's Oil Crisis and Trump's Tariff Wars Are Reshaping INR Dynamics

The Indian Rupee faces mounting headwinds from an intersection of trade policy aggression and geopolitical turbulence, with the USD/INR pair surging to near 90.50 in recent sessions. Behind this currency weakness lies a complex web of factors: from US President Donald Trump’s renewed tariff threats against India to the escalating turmoil in Venezuela—a scenario that holds profound implications for rupee stability and India’s energy economics.

The Venezuela Factor: Oil Supply Disruptions Weighing on Indian Rupee

The US-led intervention in Venezuela’s political and economic affairs has fundamentally altered the global oil calculus. According to the London-based Energy Institute, Venezuela commands 303 billion barrels of proven reserves—representing 7% of global oil supplies. Trump’s stated intention to restructure Venezuela’s oil industry has triggered a significant reshuffling of geopolitical power over energy supplies worldwide.

For India, this Venezuela development carries paradoxical implications. While the immediate reaction appears negative—driven by risk-off sentiment and capital flight—the longer-term outlook could provide unexpected relief. India sources approximately 85% of its energy needs from imported crude, making it one of the world’s largest oil importers. A potential increase in oil supply from Venezuela under new American management could theoretically depress global crude prices, ultimately benefiting India’s energy bill and providing structural support to the Indian Rupee through improved current account dynamics.

However, this potential upside remains overshadowed by near-term pressures that are actively weakening the rupee. The geopolitical turmoil surrounding Venezuela, combined with Trump’s aggressive stance toward India, has created an immediate risk-off environment that is pushing the USD/INR pair to its lifetime high of 91.55.

Multiple Pressures Mount: Trump Tariffs and Capital Outflows Hit INR

President Trump has explicitly threatened to raise tariffs on India, citing the country’s refusal to take a firmer stance on Russian oil purchases. “We could raise tariffs on India if they don’t have help on Russian oil issue,” Trump stated through Reuters. In 2025, Trump had already imposed a 50% import duty on Indian goods, which included punitive 25% tariffs specifically targeting India’s oil imports from Russia.

These trade threats have reignited commercial tensions between Washington and New Delhi, triggering an immediate market reaction. Indian importers have rushed to accumulate US Dollars, while Foreign Institutional Investors have turned decisively risk-averse. During 2025, FIIs pared their Indian equity holdings worth Rs. 3,06,418.88 crore. The outflow accelerated into January 2026, with net FII withdrawals hitting Rs. 2,978.80 crore in just the first two trading days of the month.

The Reserve Bank of India, recognizing the currency pressure, intervened in both spot and Non-Deliverable Forward (NDF) markets to provide support for the rupee. Yet despite these efforts, the USD/INR pair has continued to advance, reflecting the depth of capital flight and the strength of dollar demand originating from both trade hedging and broader risk-aversion dynamics.

The Broader Geopolitical Backdrop: Why USD Strength Is Compounding INR Weakness

Beyond India-specific concerns, the broader risk-off environment has buttressed US Dollar strength across the board. The capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on drug-trafficking charges, combined with Trump’s threats of potential military or economic action against Colombia and Iran, has accelerated a flight to safety. The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback’s performance against six major currencies, has rallied 0.35% to near 98.80, underscoring the broad-based demand for dollar assets in an uncertain geopolitical landscape.

Market participants have rotated capital away from emerging market currencies like the Indian Rupee and into traditional safe-haven assets—bullion, base metals, and hard currencies. This structural shift in risk appetite has worked against the rupee on multiple fronts simultaneously: tariff concerns, capital outflows, and geopolitical risk premiums embedded in the dollar’s valuation.

Technical Snapshot: USD/INR at Critical Juncture as Geopolitical Risks Escalate

From a technical perspective, USD/INR trades near 90.4470 on the daily chart, hovering above the 20-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) at 90.2130. The persistence of price above this technical gauge indicates sustained dip-buying demand, suggesting that traders remain inclined to buy on any weakness rather than capitulate to downside pressure.

The 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) sits at 56.86 and is climbing, confirming that upside momentum is firming. Initial support emerges at the rising 20-EMA; a daily close beneath this level would likely temper the near-term bullish bias and potentially trigger a deeper retracement toward the December lows of 89.50. Conversely, the all-time high at 91.55 looms as the critical resistance barrier on the topside. Any breach above this level would suggest capitulation among rupee bulls and signal renewed INR selling pressure.

Outlook: Can Lower Oil Prices Provide INR Relief?

The path forward for the Indian Rupee depends on the interplay between near-term geopolitical shocks and medium-term economic fundamentals. The Trump administration’s takeover of Venezuela’s oil operations could eventually translate into lower global crude prices—a scenario that would be structurally positive for India’s energy costs and current account balance.

However, that outcome remains contingent on a normalization of geopolitical risk sentiment and a reversal of capital outflows from emerging markets. In the immediate term, the USD/INR pair is likely to oscillate with volatility, buffeted by US economic data releases (starting with the ISM Manufacturing PMI for December, expected to come in at 48.3) and the closely-watched Nonfarm Payrolls figure scheduled for release on Friday. The Federal Reserve’s January 28 policy meeting—where rates are expected to remain steady in the 3.50%-3.75% range according to CME FedWatch—will also be a critical reference point for currency traders.

The Venezuela oil crisis and Trump’s tariff wars have created a complex environment where the Indian Rupee’s weakness today could paradoxically set the stage for strength tomorrow, should oil prices fall and geopolitical tensions ease. For now, the rupee remains under pressure, but the longer-term calculus may ultimately vindicate patience.

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