June 3, 2026

Why Pakistan’s Rupee Beat the INR Over 12 Months

A widely shared claim that the Pakistani rupee has “overtaken” the Indian rupee is wrong — but the relative trend behind it is real, and worth understanding.

First, a fact-check that matters for anyone reading the viral version of this story: the Indian rupee remains substantially stronger than the Pakistani rupee. As of mid-May 2026, one Indian rupee buys roughly 2.9 Pakistani rupees. The INR has not fallen below the PKR.

What is true is narrower and more interesting: over the past 12 months, the PKR has gained on the INR — rising in the region of 11–12% against it — because the Indian rupee weakened sharply against the US dollar while Pakistan’s currency held relatively steady. (Source: Exchange-Rates.org, ValutaFX)

What Actually Moved

The story is mostly about the INR, not the PKR. The Indian rupee has weakened around 11% against the dollar over the past year, with nearly half that fall coming after the recent West Asia conflict escalation, according to a CareEdge Ratings report cited by Business Standard. Foreign portfolio outflows hit roughly $13.6 billion in March 2026 — described as the highest monthly outflow in six years. (Source: Business Standard)

Because the INR is measured against the PKR through the dollar, a falling INR mechanically lifts the PKR/INR cross — even without Pakistan’s currency strengthening much on its own.

Why Pakistan’s Side Held Up

On the other side, Pakistan’s rupee has traded in a comparatively narrow band near 279 to the dollar, supported by its IMF programme. The IMF’s Executive Board recently approved a tranche unlocking about $1.32 billion, citing continued reform implementation and the rebuilding of foreign-exchange buffers. (Source: Geo News / IMF)

Single-source framing A note of caution: Pakistan’s stability is policy-managed and reform-dependent. Analysts in commentary published by Dawn have flagged that the current regime caps both downside and upside, and that any IMF disruption could reverse the calm — so this is conditional stability, not a structural shift. Treat this as one analytical view, not settled consensus. (Source: Dawn)

What Investors Should Verify

  • Crude and current account. India imports the bulk of its oil; check Brent levels and the current-account-deficit trajectory, since these drive INR pressure more than any India–Pakistan comparison.
  • FII / FPI flow data. Track monthly NSDL/RBI portfolio-flow figures rather than headline cross-rates — flows are the live signal.
  • RBI reserve adequacy. Look at import-cover months (reported as low as ~5.8 by one analyst) and the forward book, not just the headline reserves number.

This article is journalism and educational commentary, not investment advice. The author is not a SEBI-registered Research Analyst. Figures should be independently verified against official filings before any financial decision.

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PITAM GHOSH

Pitam Ghosh is the founder and editor of MarketBeat.in, a news platform covering the Indian stock market. A B.Com graduate with over 12 years of hands-on trading experience, Pitam breaks down Nifty and Sensex moves, IPOs, earnings, and sector trends into clear, actionable insights for retail investors. His goal: cut through the noise and help Indian traders make smarter, more confident market decisions.

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