Surging oil prices worldwide and a sudden spike in capital outflows also triggered volatility in the domestic currency market. Foreign investors pulled out around Rs 9,690.84 crore from equity markets on Friday.
Country's foreign exchange reserves also fell for the second straight week to USD 398.761 billion, as per RBI data.
Crude zoomed to trade above the USD 62 a barrel on signs that global inventories are shrinking. The prices also got support from expectations that the OPEC and allied producers will extend their glut-reduction accord beyond its March expiry.
The rupee opened weak at 64.66 against last Friday's close of 64.55 at the Interbank Foreign Exchange (FOREX) market as the home currency lacked catalyst to extend its weekend rally.
The domestic currency hit a low of 64.74 in afternoon deals as banks stepped up dollar purchases for their importer clients.
It finally settled at 64.68, revealing a fall of 13 paise, 0.20 per cent.
On the global front, the greenback held steady against other major currencies, as investors were still digesting the flurry of US economic reports and awaited additional information on a US tax reform plan.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback's value against a basket of six major currencies, was up at 94.92 in early trade.
In cross-currency trades, the rupee retreated against the pound sterling to finish at 84.76 from 84.37 per pound and also drifted back against the Japanese yen to settle at 56.71 per 100 yens from 56.56 earlier.
Elsewhere, the euro is trading little changed against the greenback after services activity indices in the Eurozone eased in October, but still indicating solid rate of economic expansion.
Pound Sterling, however, edged higher, recovering some of the ground it lost late last week on Bank of England interest rates guidance.
In forward market today, premium for dollar remained weak owing to sustained receiving from exporters.
The benchmark six-month premium payable in April moved down to 136.50-138.50 paise from 137-139 paise and the far forward October 2018 contract also eased to 275.50-277.50 paise from 276-278 paise.
Strong US macroeconomic data and hopes that a tax reform would further stimulate growth have depicted an optimistic demand growth outlook, boding well for the demand/supply rebalancing.
Brent futures, the international benchmark for oil prices, hit USD 62.44 per barrel in early Asian trade.
US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude hit USD 56.00 per barrel in early trading and was at USD 55.83, up 19 cents, or 0.3 per cent from the last settlement.
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