The rupee today rose 14 paise to 62.46 against the dollar, supported by better-than-expected current account data and a weakening US currency.
Fresh dollar sales by exporters also helped the rupee. However, capital outflows capped the gains, a dealer said.
The rupee resumed stable at the previous closing level of 62.60 a dollar and touched a low of 62.61 at the interbank foreign exchange market. It later climbed to a high of 62.17 as local equities recovered and exporters sold dollars.
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Traders said the US government shutdown is seen having a negative impact on economic growth, which may delay the tapering of the Fed's massive bond-purchase programme.
"Yesterday, the current account data was released, which was better than expectations and that helped the rupee to post gains against the US dollar," said Abhishek Goenka, CEO of India Forex Advisors. "It came out at USD 21 billion against expectations of USD 23 billion for the April-June quarter. Today, after the news came regarding US government's shutdown, the rupee reacted positively as the US dollar index fell."
The 30-share S&P BSE Sensex firmed up 137.38 points or 0.71 per cent. Foreign institutional investors sold a net USD 83.55 million of shares yesterday, as per Sebi data.
"Dollar index is losing for the second consecutive day as the US government began a partial shutdown on Tuesday...Which helped the rupee to trade strong," said Pramit Brahmbhatt, CEO of Alpari Financial Services (India).