The domestic unit on Monday fell sharply by 59 paise to close at nearly two-and-a-half-month-low of 70.51 due to persistent foreign fund outflows and renewed worries over rising crude oil prices.
The domestic unit on Friday snapped its four-day losing streak to end two paise higher at 69.92.
On Thursday, the domestic unit depreciated by 23 paise to settle at 69.94 on unabated foreign fund outflows amid simmering US-China trade tensions.
The domestic unit on Wednesday fell further by 28 paise to 69.71, extending its losses for the third straight day due to escalating US-China trade tensions and a massive sell-off in equity markets.
The domestic unit on Tuesday settled at 69.43, down 3 paise due to fag-end dollar demand from banks and importers amid sustained foreign fund outflows.
The domestic unit on Monday fell by 18 paise to close at 69.40, as renewed trade war worries following US President Donald Trump's threat to raise tariffs on Chinese imports spooked investors.
The domestic unit on Thursday surged 19 paise to 69.37, registering its third consecutive session of gain amid easing crude oil prices and weakening of the greenback.
The domestic unit on Tuesday ended at 69.56, up 46 paise, mainly on account of a slip in crude oil prices.
The domestic unit on Thursday slumped 39 paise to close at more than six-week low of 70.25, mainly due to soaring crude oil prices.
The domestic currency on Wednesday declined by 24 paise to close at 69.86, weighed down by a strong dollar sentiment and high demand for the greenback from importers.
The domestic currency on Tuesday recovered from the day's low to close higher by five paise at 69.62 on some dollar selling by banks and exporters.
The domestic unit on Monday plunged by 32 paise to close at a two-week low of 69.67, following a spike in crude oil prices on reports that the US will end waivers on Iranian oil imports.
The domestic unit declined by 25 paise to close at 69.42 on Monday as forex traders turned cautious in a holiday-truncated week.
The domestic unit halted its three-day winning streak as it closed 25 paise lower at 69.17 as forex traders weighed rising crude oil prices.
The domestic unit on Thursday climbed 19 paise to close at 68.92, also marking a third straight session of gains, driven by sustained foreign fund inflows.
The domestic unit advanced 19 paise on Wednesday to close at 69.11 on strong foreign fund inflows amid the greenback's weakness against key rivals overseas.
The domestic currency snapped its three-day losing streak in the previous session and rose 37 paise to settle at 69.30 against the greenback.
The domestic unit tumbled 44 paise to close at 69.67 on Monday amid higher dollar demand from importers and rising crude oil prices.
The domestic unit had closed at 69.23, down 6 paise on Friday, owing to increasing demand for the greenback from importers.
The domestic currency surged by 33 paise to close at 68.41 amid the greenback's weakness against key rivals overseas, even as oil prices firmed up on supply concerns.