The rupee opened higher at 60.48 a dollar from the previous close of 60.88 at the Interbank Foreign Exchange Market. It improved to a high of 60.45 as local stocks advanced. Later, the currency fell to a low of 61.30 before settling at 61.27, a drop of 39 paise or 0.64 per cent.
The rupee on August 7 had ended at record low of 61.30.
Finance Minister P Chidambaram today said in Parliament the government intends to compress imports of gold, silver, oil and non-essential goods. Other measures to check the rupee's slide and contain the current account deficit are also on the anvil, he said.
"However, the rupee erased its gains and started depreciating after the finance minister vowed to contain the current account deficit at 3.7 per cent of GDP but failed to give the crucial details of the same."
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The Reserve Bank of India on Thursday said it would auction Rs 22,000 crore of bonds every Monday as an additional measure to drain cash from the financial system and check speculation in the forex market.
Dollar index, a gauge of six major global rivals, was up by 0.33 per cent.
"As the day progressed, oil importers, corporate and short covering weakened the rupee," said Pramit Brahmbhatt, CEO of Alpari Financial Services (India). "The trading range for the spot USD/INR pair is expected to be within 60.50 to 61.50.