At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the rupee commenced sharply lower at 61.64 a dollar from last close of 61.22 and dipped further to a low of 61.74, a fresh 5-month low, on sluggish local stocks and initial dollar demand from importers.
However, it later rebounded to a high of 61.14 before ending at 61.15, a rise of seven paise, or 0.11 per cent.
Adding to the worry of global investors, Russian President Vladimir Putin went on retaliatory measures by banning food imports from Western countries. Russia faces sanctions imposed by the US and European countries.
Exporters and some banks also sold dollars towards the fag-end. However, steep fall in domestic equities amid fresh capital outflows restricted the rupee rise to some extent.
"...By session's close, the rupee appreciated on heavy selling of US dollars by banks and exporters. Speculative reports of a central bank intervention and broad dollar weakness also strengthened it," Admisi Forex India said.
Pramit Brahmbhatt, CEO, Veracity Group said, "The rupee opened low taking cues from weak local markets. It traded as low as 61.74 during the day but towards the end it recovered as RBI intervention was suspected through state run banks which supported Rupee and helped it to finally appreciate."
Benchmark US crude oil for September delivery rose to USD 97.95 a barrel in electronic trading on New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, which is used to price oil sold internationally, rose to USD 106.63 in London.
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