India’s Forex Reserves Plunge $6.9B: Biggest Fall in 12 Weeks

India's foreign exchange reserves saw their largest drop in three months amid global currency fluctuations. RBI intervenes to stabilize the rupee and manage volatility.

India’s foreign exchange reserves fell by $6.92 billion to $695.36 billion in the week ending October 24, 2025. This was the most significant one-week drop in 12 weeks and a sign that the world’s gold and currency markets are becoming more volatile again. Below is a complete analysis of the development:

Overview of the Decline

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said that reserves were $695.36 billion, a significant drop from $702.28 billion the previous week. This drop is the opposite of the substantial gain the week before, when gold reserves rose sharply. The most recent drop is now the largest since August, indicating that outside forces are growing stronger.

Breakdown of Reserve Components

Several factors have combined to pressure India’s forex reserves:

RBI’s Response and Policy Position

The RBI does not have a set exchange rate target and intervenes only to maintain market order and prevent sudden drops in the rupee’s value. This optional method aims to lower exchange rate volatility without going against larger market trends.

Global and Local Implications

Conclusion

India’s $6.92 billion drop in forex reserves reflects volatile global currency and commodity markets, compounded by strategic market interventions and external economic pressures. While the reduction raises short-term concerns, the nation’s overall reserve position remains strong, and the RBI continues to navigate evolving global headwinds with measured policy actions.


Key Data Snapshot:

ComponentWeekly ChangeNew Value
Forex Reserves-$6.92B$695.36B ​
Foreign Currency Assets-$3.86B$566.55B
Gold Reserves-$3.01B$105.54B
SDR Holdings-$58M$18.66B ​
IMF Reserve Position+$6M$4.61B ​
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