India's foreign exchange reserves strengthened by $544.7 million to $275.35 billion on a healthy increase in the core currency assets in the week ended September 13.
India's foreign exchange reserves rose marginally by $49 million to touch $118.62 billion for the week ended May 14.
India's foreign exchange reserves rose further by $89 million to reach $118.57 billion for the week ended May 7.
Foreign exchange reserves zoomed $2.238 billion to $146.159 billion for the week ended March 17
The reserves had dipped by $1.12 billion in the previous reporting week.
For the second week in a row, India's foreign exchange reserves fell by a whopping $1.25 billion to $118.31 billion for the week ended July 30.
There was further accretion of $452 million during the week ending November 14 taking the country's foreign exchange reserves to record high of $93.663 billion.
The country's foreign exchange reserves surged ahead and during the week under review rose to $92,598 million from $91,892 million a week ago, according to Reserve Bank of India 's weekly statistical supplement released here on Saturday.
India's foreign exchange reserves inched closer towards the $85 billion mark following record inflows during the week ended July 26.
After witnessing only a marginal rise in inflows for three weeks, India's foreign exchange reserves rose by $1 billion to $142.54 billion for the week ended April 22, 2005.
India's foreign exchange reserves rose by $104 million during the week ending September 17 to touch $118.359 billion, the Reserve Bank of India said on Saturday.
After a dip last week, India's foreign exchange reserves again went up to record highs and were nearing the $75 billion mark during the week ended March 28, 2003.\n\n
Reversing the trend of net inflows seen over the past three weeks, India's foreign exchange reserves dropped by a whopping $1.53 billion to $119.57 billion for the week ended July 23.
India's foreign exchange reserves surged by $685 million to touch $108.36 billion following fresh inflows and revaluation of the United States currency vis-a-vis other currencies for the week ended February 27.
India's foreign exchange reserves surged ahead with further accretion of $169 million due to fresh inflows and revaluation of the US currency vis-a-vis other currencies for the week ended February 20.\n\n\n\n
India's foreign exchange reserves continued to rise with inflows of $464 million to reach record levels of $109.59 billion for the week ended March 12.
India's foreign exchange reserves rose to $100.59 billion in the week ended December 26 from $100.04 billion the previous week, according to the Reserve Bank of India's weekly statistical supplement released in Mumbai on Saturday.
India's foreign exchange reserves surged ahead by a record inflow of over $1.7 billion to touch $103.82 billion during the week ended January 9, 2004.
India's foreign exchange reserves rose by $692 million at $86,255 million during the week ended August 29.
India's foreign exchange reserves crossed the $81 billion mark following inflows of $513 million during the week ended May 30.\n\n\n\n
Gold reserves were up by $1.525 billion in the reporting week to $37.625 billion.
The foreign exchange reserves rose by $2 billion to $279.096 billion for the week ended April 2 as against $277.042 billion in the previous week.
The foreign exchange kitty had crossed the half-a-trillion mark for the first time in the week ended June 5, 2020, after it had swelled by $8.223 billion to stand at $501.703 billion.
India's foreign exchange reserves crossed the $100 billion mark during the week ending December 19 and stood at $100.049 billion.
The foreign exchange reserves moved up $326 million to $76.077 billion for the week ended April 18, 2003.
Continuing their rising trend, the country's foreign exchange reserves increased by $1.350 billion to touch a record high of $361.601 billion in the week to April 22.
Rise in reserves was predominantly on account of increase in FCAs
India's foreign exchange reserves declined by $215 million at $81.905 billion during the week ended June 27, 2003. \n\n\n\n
At a time when crude oil and natural gas prices are sky-high, public sector behemoth ONGC's haphazard planning and mismanagement in developing showpiece deep-sea KG-D5 block is costing the nation over Rs 18,000 crores due to the delayed output of oil and gas, government officials said. ONGC was originally to start gas production from the Cluster-II fields in block KG-DWN-98/2 (KG-D5) in June 2019 and the first oil was to flow in March 2020. But these targets were quietly shifted to end-2021 because of deferments in awarding the fragmented work packages of the project, two officials with direct knowledge of the matter said on condition of anonymity.
After declining for two consecutive weeks, the country's foreign exchange reserves jumped by $2.294 billion to $316.801 billion on the back of healthy rise in foreign currency assets last week.
The rupee, which has been in virtual free fall over the past few days, recovered slightly to close at Rs 83.20 to the dollar in the inter-bank market after State Bank of Pakistan intervened by selling about USD 40 million in the foreign exchange market. Experts have attributed the fall of the rupee's value to speculation as well as a high demand for dollars from importers and general consumers.
Raghuram Rajan has described the fall in reserves as dip in valuation with appreciation of dollar against other currencies
The country's foreign exchange reserves dipped by $223 million to $299.17 billion driven by a drop in its foreign currency assets.
Country's foreign exchange reserves declined sharply by $3.433 billion to $351.920 billion.
Reserve Bank Governor Sanjay Malhotra on Friday said the exchange rate policy has remained consistent over the years and the central bank does not target any 'specific level or band' of the rupee, which slipped to an all-time low of 87.59 to a US dollar. On Thursday, the rupee plunged 16 paise to close at a record low of 87.59 against the American currency. "I would like to mention here that the Reserve Bank's exchange rate policy has remained consistent over the years.
After having declined for two consecutive weeks, India's foreign exchange reserves grew by $293 million to $282.84 billion compared to earlier week's $282.55-billion.
India's foreign exchange reserves declined by $4.56 billion to $282.79 billion for the week ended August 13, as against $287.35 billion the previous week due to a heavy dent in foreign currency assets.
Foreign exchange reserves have hit a fresh high.
Foreign currency assets increase by $3.902 billion