Asian currencies face renewed pressure as the collapse of US-Iran ceasefire negotiations sent Brent crude above $90 a barrel, raising import costs for net oil consumers across the region.
Asian currencies face renewed pressure as the collapse of US-Iran ceasefire negotiations sent Brent crude above $90 a barrel, raising import costs for net oil consumers across the region.

Asian currencies consolidated against the dollar in early trade Wednesday but faced mounting headwinds after the collapse of US-Iran ceasefire negotiations sent Brent crude above $90 a barrel for the first time in three months.
"The breakdown of talks removes the primary de-escalation catalyst that had been priced into oil markets since April," said Elena Fischer, geopolitical risk analyst at Edgen. "Asian FX is now repricing the risk premium, particularly for net oil importers like India and Indonesia."
Brent crude jumped 4.2% to $91.80 a barrel in Asian trading after diplomatic sources confirmed the weekend collapse of US-Iran negotiations. Disagreements over sanctions relief timelines and uranium enrichment limits derailed the talks, reigniting fears of supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz, which handles about 20% of global oil trade. The Indian rupee fell to 84.52 against the dollar, its weakest level in three months, while the Indonesian rupiah slipped 0.3% and the Thai baht declined 0.2%.
The stakes are highest for India, which imports about 85% of its crude requirements. A $10 increase in oil prices widens India's current account deficit by roughly $15 billion and pushes inflation higher, complicating the Reserve Bank of India's monetary policy stance. The RBI is widely expected to intervene in the forex market to prevent excessive volatility, though its ability to defend the currency is constrained by foreign exchange reserves that have declined 8% from a year ago to $620 billion. The last time Brent sustained a level above $90 for more than two weeks — during the Russia-Ukraine escalation in early 2022 — the rupee weakened 4.5% over the following quarter while the RBI burned through $35 billion in reserves defending it.
Oil at $90 and the regional transmission mechanism
For Southeast Asian economies, the oil price shock compounds existing pressure from a strong US dollar. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index held near a three-month high Wednesday, supported by resilient US labor data that has pushed back expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts. Markets now price a 45% probability of a cut by September, down from 70% a month ago, according to CME FedWatch data.
The Indonesian rupiah is among the most vulnerable, given the country's shift from net oil exporter to net importer over the past decade. Bank Indonesia has already spent $5 billion defending the currency this year, and analysts expect further intervention if Brent holds above $90. The Philippine peso and Malaysian ringgit face similar dynamics, though Malaysia's status as a net oil exporter provides a partial buffer.
What comes next
The trajectory of Asian currencies hinges on two variables: whether US-Iran tensions escalate further and whether OPEC+ responds with additional supply. The next OPEC+ meeting is scheduled for Aug. 5, and delegates have signaled willingness to unwind some production cuts if prices remain elevated. A 500,000 barrel-per-day increase would likely cap Brent near $95, according to traders.
For now, the risk premium is building. Options skew for Brent has shifted sharply bullish, with the premium for out-of-the-money calls over puts widening to the highest since April. Asian central banks face a familiar dilemma: let currencies weaken to support exports, or defend them to contain imported inflation. The RBI's choice over the coming weeks will set the template for the region.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.