The battered rupee gained 225 paise to 66.55 against the dollar today, the most in at least 15 years, after the Reserve Bank of India eased pressure in the currency market by starting a facility for state-run oil refiners to buy foreign exchange.
The rupee, which closed at a record low yesterday, ended a three-day losing streak even as the dollar strengthened overseas and capital outflows continued. Fresh dollar sales by exporters on expectations of a further rise in the rupee also helped the local currency.
The RBI last night said PSU oil companies could buy dollars through a special swap window effective immediately. Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum are the biggest buyers of dollars, requiring about USD 8.5 billion every month to import an average 7.5 million tonnes of oil.
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Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a report today the RBI will have to take far more pro-active steps to rebuild forex reserves, because if the status quo remains, the rupee could touch 75 per dollar by the end of 2014.
At the interbank foreign exchange market, the rupee opened at 66.90 to a dollar from the previous close of 68.80 and fell to a low of 67.92 on dollar demand from importers. It bounced back to 66.51 before ending at 66.55, a rise of 225 paise or 3.27 per cent.
The rupee's recent decline cast a shadow in Parliament today, with opposition parties saying there was panic in the country. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh conceded the country faced a "difficult" economic situation and said he would make a statement tomorrow.
The benchmark S&P BSE Sensex flaring up by 405 points or 2.25 per cent. FIIs pulled out a net Rs 1,120.43 crore of stocks yesterday, as per provisional stock exchange data.