Analysis
Rupee Records Gain Against US Dollar: Currency Settles at 279.31 as Safe-Haven Dollar Hits Highest Level Since November Amid Iran Conflict Turmoil
On the trading floors of Karachi’s inter-bank market Friday morning, a single pip of movement — from 279.32 to 279.31 — told a story far larger than its decimal-place modesty suggests. Outside those air-conditioned dealing rooms, Pakistani families were already absorbing the downstream tremors of a war being fought thousands of miles away: liquefied natural gas supplies from Qatar disrupted, fuel costs creeping upward, and grocery bills tightening in a country that imports nearly 40 percent of its energy needs. Yet the rupee, against all intuition, held its ground — and even nudged fractionally stronger against the world’s most sought-after safe-haven currency.
That currency, the US dollar, was having rather a good week of its own. The dollar index (DXY), which measures the greenback against a basket of six major peers, climbed to its highest reading since November — touching 99.63 in early Asian trading on Friday, down just 0.04 percent intraday but on track for a weekly advance of 0.8 percent. It was the dollar’s second consecutive weekly gain since the United States and Israel launched joint strikes on Iran on February 28, triggering the largest disruption to global oil supplies since the Suez Crisis of 1956.
How the rupee managed a marginal appreciation against this resurgent dollar — and what that tells us about Pakistan’s precarious economic moment — is a question that requires both a currency trader’s precision and a geopolitical historian’s sweep.
Why the Rupee Defied the Dollar’s Safe-Haven Surge
The immediate answer to the PKR exchange rate puzzle lies in momentum and managed stability rather than fundamental strength. Pakistan’s inter-bank rupee rate today reflects the State Bank of Pakistan’s (SBP) continued intervention framework, which has sought to prevent the kind of disorderly depreciation that scarred the country during its 2023 balance-of-payments crisis. The currency settled at 279.31 USD to PKR on Thursday’s close, a fractional improvement from 279.32 the previous session — a gain so slim it would barely register as a rounding error were it not for the context surrounding it.
Yet context is everything. The Pakistan rupee rate today is holding within a remarkably narrow band even as emerging-market currencies across South and Southeast Asia are taking a battering from dollar strength and surging import bills. The Indonesian rupiah has weakened sharply; the Indian rupee has come under pressure; the Sri Lankan currency remains fragile. Against this backdrop, PKR stability is, in relative terms, a modest achievement.
Three factors explain the rupee’s resilience. First, the SBP has maintained a managed float that caps excessive short-term volatility, acting as a buffer against external shocks. Second, remittance inflows — Pakistan’s economic lifeline — have held firm as the Pakistani diaspora in Gulf states, the United Kingdom, and North America continues to send money home, partly drawn by more favourable exchange-rate conditions than existed twelve months ago. Third, and perhaps most counterintuitively, the partial easing of import demand due to Pakistan’s economic slowdown has somewhat reduced pressure on the current account, lessening the appetite for dollars in the inter-bank market.
Iran War Turmoil and the Dollar Index at 11-Month High
The dollar’s current strength is a story of dual engines firing simultaneously, and understanding it requires grasping something that would have seemed paradoxical even five years ago: the United States is now a net energy exporter.
When the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index staged its biggest two-day rally in nearly a year following the onset of the Iran conflict, analysts pointed to two reinforcing dynamics. The first was the classic flight-to-quality response — when global investors grow fearful, they buy dollars, US Treasuries, and other liquid dollar-denominated assets. The second was structural: because the US now produces more energy than it consumes, surging oil prices are an economic tailwind for America, not the headwind they once were.
“Not only are high oil prices no longer a headwind for the dollar,” Paul Weller, a foreign exchange strategist cited by S&P Global Market Intelligence, noted, “but they’re arguably now a tailwind, especially when accompanied by a risk-off safe-haven bid.” Jane Foley, head of foreign exchange research at Rabobank, was equally direct: the Iran conflict has settled the debate about whether the dollar retains its safe-haven status after a bruising year of de-dollarisation narratives. It emphatically does.
The DXY’s reading of 99.63 — the highest since November 2025 — came after the dollar had climbed roughly 2.1 percent from its late-February levels, when the index was closer to 96. The conflict’s second week has seen Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei pledge to maintain the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz — the narrow waterway through which approximately a fifth of global oil supplies normally transits. Every credible threat to extend that closure sends another wave of capital into the dollar’s embrace.
For Pakistan, the consequences run deeper than any single exchange-rate print. Elisabeth Colleran, co-head of the emerging markets debt team at Loomis Sayles, captured the dynamic precisely: when global volatility spikes, the dollar rallies, and all other currencies — “euro included” — are pushed down. For a frontier-market economy still in the midst of an IMF stabilisation programme, that means tighter financial conditions, narrower room for monetary easing, and a structurally more expensive import bill.
Oil at $100+ a Barrel: Mixed Blessings for Pakistan as US Exports Energy
Brent May futures settled around $100.56 a barrel on Friday — up just 0.1 percent intraday but poised for a weekly gain of approximately 9 percent, one of the sharpest weekly moves in years. WTI April contracts were slightly softer at $95.57, off 0.2 percent, headed for a 7 percent weekly advance despite the US Treasury’s Thursday issuance of a 30-day general licence permitting purchases of previously sanctioned Russian crude stranded at sea.
The IEA’s emergency release of a record 400 million barrels from strategic reserves — the largest such move in history — has done little more than paper over a structural deficit. As the CNN analysis noted, that 400 million barrels covers only approximately 26 days of supply lost through Hormuz disruption, and Iran’s new leadership has signalled no intention of reopening the strait.
For Pakistan, this creates a toxic arithmetic. The country imports 40 percent of its energy needs and relied particularly heavily on LNG from Qatar — supplies that have been severed by the conflict, according to PBS NewsHour. Economists Gareth Leather and Mark Williams at Capital Economics have argued that rather than cutting interest rates to offer relief to a slowing economy, the SBP may be compelled to raise them — because persistently higher energy prices threaten to reignite inflation that has remained uncomfortably elevated by regional standards.
The bitter irony is that oil at $100 per barrel is simultaneously enriching America’s energy producers and quietly crushing Pakistan’s households. A country that once benefited from relatively cheap Gulf hydrocarbons now finds itself paying a geopolitical premium it neither caused nor controls.
Key data points at a glance:
- Brent crude (May futures): $100.56 | +9% weekly gain
- WTI crude (April futures): $95.57 | +7% weekly gain
- Pakistan energy import dependency: ~40% of total needs
- LNG from Qatar: effectively disrupted since Feb. 28
Yen, Euro and Sterling: The Other Casualties of Safe-Haven Flight
Pakistan is not alone in watching its currency wilt before the dollar’s current authority. The major G10 pairs tell a consistent story of asymmetric impact.
The euro traded at $1.1525, up just 0.13 percent intraday but near its weakest level since November — pressured by FXStreet data showing EUR/USD losing ground for three consecutive sessions as the Hormuz closure stoked stagflationary fears across the eurozone, which imports the vast majority of its energy.
The Japanese yen offered the most dramatic signal of stress: USD/JPY climbed to 159.43 on Thursday — its weakest since January 14 — before pulling back slightly to 159.08 (+0.17%). Japan’s vulnerability is structural: as a massive net energy importer, every dollar-per-barrel increase in oil translates directly into a larger import bill and a weaker yen. Markets are watching closely for signs of Bank of Japan intervention; the 160 level, which triggered intervention in 2024, remains the psychological tripwire.
Sterling held relatively better at $1.3356 (+0.11%), buoyed in part by the UK’s comparatively more balanced energy position and the Bank of England’s hawkish recent signalling. But the pound, too, is tracking lower against the dollar on a weekly basis.
The pattern is unmistakable: the Iran conflict has triggered what one analyst from the 2026 Middle East crisis coverage aptly described as a “Stagflationary Risk-Off” shift — one where traditional safe havens like Japanese government bonds and even gold are struggling, and the dollar, uniquely insulated by America’s energy exporter status, stands almost alone as the credible refuge.
What This Means for Pakistani Importers, Exporters and SBP Policy
For Pakistani businesses and households navigating the interbank rupee rate in real time, the current configuration presents a split-screen reality.
Importers face a double squeeze: a stronger dollar raises the cost of dollar-denominated purchases even before the commodity price effect, and that commodity price effect — in energy, petrochemicals, edible oils, and fertilisers — is itself ferocious. Up to 30 percent of global fertiliser exports, including urea and phosphates, transit the Strait of Hormuz. Pakistani farmers, already grappling with climate disruption, will face higher input costs precisely when food security concerns are mounting globally.
Exporters, particularly in Pakistan’s critical textile sector, stand to benefit modestly from a structurally weaker rupee over time — more rupees per dollar earned means higher local-currency revenues. But the benefit is partially eroded by higher energy costs in production, and by the global demand uncertainty that accompanies any prolonged oil shock. If the conflict persists and oil reaches the $120-130 range that Chatham House analysts consider plausible in a more severe scenario, the net export benefit quickly becomes ambiguous.
For the SBP, the policy calculus is exquisitely uncomfortable. Pakistan’s ongoing IMF programme — agreed in the wake of the 2023 crisis — requires fiscal consolidation, reserve accumulation, and a degree of exchange-rate flexibility. The current period tests all three simultaneously: capital outflows from emerging markets, higher import costs threatening the current account, and inflation pressures that could derail the path toward lower interest rates that Pakistani businesses desperately need.
The central bank’s managed float has bought it credibility and stability. The question for the weeks ahead is whether that credibility can be sustained as global conditions tighten further.
Outlook: Will the Rupee’s Streak Continue in 2026?
The honest answer is: it depends far more on Tehran and Washington than on Karachi.
Three scenarios present themselves. In the most benign — a rapid ceasefire or diplomatic resolution, oil returning toward pre-conflict levels of $60-70 per barrel within weeks — Pakistan would likely see continued rupee stability, possible SBP rate cuts in the second half of the year, and manageable pressure on its IMF programme. Chatham House’s analysts suggest that in this scenario, inflation in energy-importing economies rises by only around 0.5 percentage points above pre-conflict forecasts for 2026.
In a medium scenario — conflict persisting for several months, oil stabilising in the $90-100 range — Pakistan would face a prolonged squeeze. The current account would deteriorate, the SBP would be forced to delay any monetary easing, and the rupee’s current stability would require more active management. Remittance inflows from Gulf-based workers — a critical buffer — could also come under pressure if Gulf economies begin to feel the strain of production cuts and regional instability.
In the worst-case scenario — a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz, oil at $130 or above, and a sustained dollar rally past 100 on the DXY — Pakistan’s position becomes genuinely alarming. Its IMF support would remain vital but potentially insufficient to absorb both a terms-of-trade shock and a global risk-off environment simultaneously.
There are structural wildcards, too. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which has delivered significant renewable-energy infrastructure to Pakistan, is now being viewed through a new lens: every solar panel and wind turbine installed under CPEC reduces Pakistan’s exposure to the very oil-price volatility that is currently ravaging its economy. The Stimson Center’s Dan Markey, quoted by Inside Climate News, has argued that Pakistan will have “every reason to turn to China for renewable energy technologies” in the wake of this crisis — a strategic pivot with profound long-term implications for the CPEC relationship and for Pakistan’s energy autonomy.
The rupee vs dollar March 2026 picture is ultimately a microcosm of the broader global realignment underway. A fractional gain of one pip in the inter-bank market feels almost quaint against the backdrop of a region at war, oil markets in convulsion, and a global safe-haven hierarchy being stress-tested in real time. But markets, like history, move in cumulative inches before they lurch in miles. Pakistani policymakers — and the businesses and families who depend on them — would do well to watch both.