The rupee today fell by 7 paise against the US currency to close at 66.84 on fresh dollar demand from banks and importers on the back of strong dollar in overseas markets.
Firm stock markets as well as consistent foreign capital inflows failed to restrict the rupee's fall against the dollar, a forex dealer said.
The rupee opened lower at 66.85 per dollar as against last closing level of 66.77 per dollar at the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market. It hovered in a range of 66.71 and 66.8575 before ending at 66.84 a dollar, showing a loss of 7 paise or 0.10 per cent.
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Pramit Brahmbhatt of Veracity Financial Services said, "At lower levels, a supportive buying in dollar forced rupee to depreciate since opening trade. Trading range for the spot USD/INR pair will be 66.50 to 67/USD."
Meanwhile, the RBI fixed the reference rate for the dollar at 66.7407 and euro at 74.0622.
In cross-currency trades, the rupee recovered against the pound sterling to settle at 87.25 from 87.95 on last Friday and also recouped against the Japanese yen to end at 65.31 per 100 yens from 66.05.
The domestic unit recovered against the euro to close at 74.05 from 74.32.
The dollar index was trading up by 0.09 per cent against a basket of six currencies in the late afternoon trade.
In Asian trade, the dollar strengthened against the yen, extending its gains after strong US job figures bolstered expectations of faster economic growth and raised the probability of a Federal Reserve interest rate increase this year.
In the forward market, premium for dollar continued to decline on sustained receivings from exporters.
The benchmark six-month premium for January 2017 eased to 190-192 paise from 191-193 paise on last Friday while far forward July 2017 contract ruled steady at 388-390 paise.
Oil edged higher to near USD 42 a barrel in Asia today but analysts said the increase was unlikely to last as the commodity remains under pressure by a supply glut and a strong dollar.
Meanwhile, the benchmark BSE sensex rose further by 104.22 points or 0.37 per cent to close at 28,182.57.
Meanwhile, domestic equities made smart recovery after
a brief overnight fall to end at 17-month high, despite heavy selling pressure in technology heavyweights spooked by TCS profit warning and weak revenue guidance.
The flagship Sensex surged by 118.92 points to end at 29,045.28, while broader Nifty rose 34.55 points to 8,952.50.
In the forward market, premium for dollar continued drift owing to sustained receiving by exporters.
The benchmark six-month premium for February slipped to 180.5-182.5 paise from 183-185 paise and the forward August 2017 contract also fell to 370.5-372.5 paise from 373-375 paise previously.
Crude prices extended gains after US crude stocks surprisingly plunged by 12.1 million barrels last week, data from the American Petroleum Institute showed after market settlement on Wednesday.