The Indian Rupee touched a historic intraday low of ₹90.5 per US dollar on December 5, 2025 — its weakest level ever — before recovering after Reserve Bank of India (RBI) intervention through state-run banks aggressively selling dollars. The RBI also cut the repo rate by 25 basis points (bps) to 5.25% and announced liquidity infusion of nearly ₹1.5 lakh crore into the banking system via bond purchases and forex swaps. The rupee's depreciation has been driven by: delays in the India-US FTA negotiations, persistent FII capital outflows, a strong US dollar globally (driven by Federal Reserve policy and Trump's return as US President), rising trade deficit, and geopolitical uncertainty. The depreciation has significant macroeconomic implications: it raises import costs (crude oil, electronics, capital goods), fuels inflationary pressure, and increases external debt servicing costs — but also benefits export-oriented sectors such as IT services, pharmaceuticals, and textiles. For Rajasthan, a weaker rupee boosts the competitiveness of its major export sectors: gems and jewellery (Jaipur), marble (Makrana, Kishangarh), handicrafts and textiles, and international tourism.