A late recovery in local stocks and fag-end dollar selling by exporters also supported the currency.
The rupee opened sharply lower at 60.91 a dollar from the previous close of 60.47 at the interbank foreign exchange market and dropped to 61.20, near the all-time low of 61.21 recorded on July 8, on initial weakness in domestic equities and sustained dollar demand from importers.
Later, expectations of intervention by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) at the lowest level and fresh dollar selling by exporters helped the rupee to bounce back to a high of 60.35 before settling at 60.40, a rise of seven paise.
The Commerce Ministry today also decided to raise the rate of interest on the subsidy scheme for exporters to 3 per cent and widen the coverage of the scheme to cover more sectors.
"Rupee was seen recovering against the US dollar and erased the heavy losses incurred yesterday. It was seen gaining on the back of the positive statements given by the FM and some encouraging announcements made by the Commerce Minister," said Abhishek Goenka, founder and CEO of India Forex Advisors.
In the global market, the U.S. Dollar was trading flat against its major rivals as investors awaited a statement on monetary policy from the U.S. Federal Reserve and the preliminary estimate of second-quarter growth for the world's largest economy.
