The precipitous fall in the rupee in recent months has shocked most people. Not us. You may recall reading the following on this very page — in our issue dated June 26, 2010 — when we presented a cover story on how to cope with a volatile rupee. “Seeing the yo-yoing in the past two years, it is amply clear that the rupee is far from charting it own destiny. It is still driven by the dollar (and the dollar is now being driven by the euro). ...As things stand now, sustained low interest rates in the US — and now the Eurozone, too — makes a strong case for money flowing into emerging markets like India. This should ideally keep the local currency buoyant. But there is a caveat here: the world’s fixation with the dollar. So if there is trouble brewing anywhere in the world, capital flees to the US. The fact is, the world still does not see the dollar as a competing asset class to other currencies but as an alternative to cash. Especially so, when the world is fearful.”