Robust capital inflows into equities and debt predominantly supported the domestic currency even as forex market continued to price in a rate rise by the US Federal Reserve next week.
The local currency also benefited from a strong rally in local equities as well as subdued greenback overseas.
Indian equities made a strong comeback to hit multi-year highs following a broad-based buying spree despite heightened geopolitical worries after North Korea reportedly launched a series of missiles.
The home unit resumed higher at 66.77 from the weekend closing value of 66.81 at the Interbank Foreign Exchange (forex) market.
It largely moved in a tight range of 66.6950 and 66.78 throughout the day before ending at 66.71, showing a gain of 10 paise, 0.15 per cent.
Meanwhile, the greenback slipped a little against its major trading rivals despite hawkish statement by US Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen last Friday, which reiterated a rate increase would come at the close of its two-day meeting on March 15.
The RBI fixed the reference rate for the dollar at 66.7559 and for the euro at 70.7346.
In cross-currency trade, the rupee, however, fell back against the British pound to end at 81.76 from 81.65 and drifted against the euro to finish at 70.59 as compared to 70.44.
Meanwhile, country's foreign exchange reserves increased
by USD 63.7 million to USD 362.79 billion for the week ended February 24.
Domestic equities witnessed a spectacular rebound after a two-session lacklustre trade following strong buying activity across the sectors except IT and pharma shares even as heavyweight Reliance Industries continued its strong rally.
In the forward market, premium for dollar dropped further due to sustained receivings from exporters.
The benchmark six-month premium for August declined to 157-159 paise from 159.50-161.50 paise and the far-forward February 2018 contract also edged down to 314-316 paise from 316-318 paise last Friday.
On global commodity front, crude prices retreated in Asian trade on Monday, wiping out some of the gains of the previous session amid worries lower growth targets in China could cut oil demand.
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