MUMBAI: The Indian rupee is likely to see mild relief at open on Tuesday, helped by oil’s rally halting, while a slightly improved risk tone lent further support to the under-pressure currency. The 1-month non-deliverable forward indicated the rupee will open in the 92.35-92.40 range versus the US dollar , having settled at 92.42 on Monday. Brent crude fell nearly 3% on Monday , while US equities rallied, the dollar weakened, and Treasury yields slipped, marking a reversal of the price action seen since the outbreak of the Iran war. The pullback in oil came amid some ships making the transit through the Strait of Hormuz and on rising expectations of further strategic stockpile releases by IEA member nations. However, the relief appeared fragile, with oil prices in the Asian session largely recovering from Monday’s drop. Brent crude futures were last quoted at $103.04. US allies rebuffed calls to send warships to help tankers move through the Strait of Hormuz, drawing criticism from US President Donald Trump. “The prospect of de-escalation remains unclear amid mixed signals from both the US and Iran,” Morgan Stanley said in a daily note to its clients. US equity futures declined in Asian trade, while Indian equities were set for a slightly softer open after Monday’s relief rally. Foreign investors continued to pull money out of India despite the recovery, with outflows hitting nearly $1 billion on Monday. Oil risks building Higher-for-longer oil prices remain a major headwind for the rupee, with India importing nearly 90% of its crude requirements, increasing pressure on the trade balance and inflation. Some banks have raised their longer-term oil price forecasts, with Bank of America lifting its 2026 Brent projection to $77.50 a barrel from $61 and Standard Chartered raising its estimate to $85.50 from $70.