The domestic currency had plunged by 23 paise to over 2- week low of 64.53 a dollar yesterday after the US Federal Reserve hiked rate by 25 bps as widely expected and maintained a hawkish tone going forward.
Heavy capital outflows alongside near-term consequences of the Fed rate hike largely kept forex market undertone shaky in early trade even today.
Though, the home currency made a strong comeback in late afternoon trade after the dollar gave up its strong gains against major global currencies, bolstering Asian currencies.
It drifted further to hit an intra-day low of 64.74 in mid-morning trade and largely traded range-bound within quiet trading conditions.
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However, staging a rebound from initial slide, the rupee touched a fresh high of 64.40 in fag-end trade before ending the day at 64.43, showing a gain of 10 paise, or 0.15 per cent.
The RBI, meanwhile, fixed the reference rate for the dollar at 64.5883 and for the euro at 72.0482.
India's imports too increased by 33 per cent to USD 37.85 billion in May this year.
The domestic equities, despite a strong start, endured yet another sluggish session today on the back of heavy profit-taking in healthcare and technology counters after recent strong rally amid lack of supportive cues.
After witnessing extreme volatility in late trade, key benchmark indices settled on a mixed note.
On the global front, the dollar slipped lower against other major currencies, pulling away from a recent two-week high as investors were preparing for a fresh batch of US data due later in the day, after strong economic reports boosted US optimism.
The dollar index, which tracks the US currency against a basket of six major rivals, was down by 0.21 per cent at 97.29.
Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan held monetary policy steady in its June board review.
In cross-currency trades, the rupee bounced back against the pound sterling to settle at 82.28 from 82.40 per pound and maintained strong momentum against the euro to finish higher at 71.99 from 72.00.
In forward market today, premium for dollar displayed a lacklustre trend owing to lack of market moving factors.
The benchmark six-month premium payable in November was quoted unchanged at 134-136 paise, while the far forward May 2018 contract edged higher to 280-282 paise from 279-281 paise yesterday.
On the international commodity front, crude oil prices regained some lost ground from 2017 lows on Friday but an ongoing supply excess put them on track for their fourth consecutive week of losses despite OPEC-led production cuts to support the crude market.
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