Lower stock purchases by foreign institutional investors and sustained dollar demand from importers, mainly oil refiners, also put pressure on the rupee, a forex dealer said.
At the interbank foreign exchange market, the rupee opened weak at 62.85 a dollar from 62.57 previously and moved in a tight range before ending at 62.93, a fall of 36 paise or 0.58%. Yesterday, it declined 21 paise or 0.34%.
In New York, the dollar rose against the euro after Federal Reserve minutes showed the pace of monthly bond purchases may be trimmed in the coming months as the economy improves. The dollar index, consisting of six major global units, was up 0.11%.
Data released yesterday showed US retail sales in October jumped 0.4%.
"Rupee was seen depreciating against the US dollar in the opening itself due to strength in the US dollar. Gains in US dollar are attributed to the retail sales data, which beat expectations despite the government shutdown," said Abhishek Goenka, CEO of India Forex Advisors.
Asian currencies were weak due to strong US data and the FOMC minutes released yesterday, Goenka said.
The 30-share benchmark Sensex plunged 406.08 points or 1.97% today. Overseas investors picked up shares worth a net Rs 80.4 crore yesterday, as per provisional data. They had bought a net Rs 1,014.61 crore of shares a day earlier.
"Rupee depreciated over half%, taking cues from strong dollar, which...Gained after the minutes from the US Federal Reserve's October policy meeting suggested that the central bank could soon move to taper monetary stimulus," said Pramit Brahmbhatt, CEO of Alpari Financial Services (India).
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