The rupee staged a smart rebound after overcoming early volatile movements largely impacted by the dollar’s strength against most peers.
But the gains were capped due to month-end dollar demand from importers, mainly oil firms.
At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the local unit opened on a steady note at 66.89 before drifting sideways to hit a low of 66.9225.
However, the domestic currency recovered in late afternoon deals to touch a fresh intra-day high of 66.8250 on late exporter dollar sales.
It finally settled at 66.85, revealing a gain of 4 paise, or 0.06 per cent.
The rupee has been under steady pressure in recent weeks on growing expectations that the Federal Reserve may go for a rate hike at the end of this year and also an adverse spillover effect of USD 22.4 billion possible outflow in the wake of ongoing FCNR-B redemptions.
In the meantime, country’s foreign exchange reserves declined for the second-straight week by USD 1.506 billion to USD 366.139 billion in the week to October 14.
In worldwide trade, the American currency continued its rising trend against most major and emerging market currencies.
Pound sterling remained under selling pressure on mounting concerns that rating agency could downgrade the UK, while euro gained some ground after recent sharp plunge following release of stronger PMI readings.
The dollar index, which measures its broader strength against a basket of currencies, was down 0.03 per cent at 98.59 after touching a high of 98.846 – its loftiest peak in nine months in early trade.
The RBI today fixed the reference rate for the dollar at 66.8625 and euro at 72.7999.
In cross-currency trades, the rupee fell back against the pound sterling to end at 81.86 as compared to 81.65 and also softened against euro to finish at 72.87 from 72.86.
earlier.
On the other hand, it maintained advances against the Japanese yen to finish at 64.30 from 64.47 per 100 yens last weekend. .
PTI