Frantic capital outflows against the grim backdrop of a steep correction in domestic equities largely weighed on trading front even as fears deepened over speculation that US Federal Reserve may raise short-term interest rates.
Foreign investors remained net sellers and sold shares worth Rs 2,297 crore on net basis yesterday, as the turmoil in global stock markets saw traders shun equities in favour of perceived safe havens.
However, a sustained slide in crude oil prices limited further losses in the rupee.
Most Asian currencies were also weaker against the dollar.
In the international energy front, the rout in global crude prices remained unabated for the sixth day as sharp rise in US crude output added to concerns about a global supply glut. It was also impacted by higher production plan from the OPEC member Iran within the next four years.
Brent crude futures were trading lower at USD 64.36 a barrel in early Asian trading.
In the meantime, the overnight relief rally proved to be short-lived today as domestic bourses succumbed to widespread sell-off.
Earlier, struggling to build on overnight rebound, the rupee opened sharply lower at 64.42 against previous session close of 64.26 at the Interbank Foreign Exchange (forex) market tracking another massive sell-off in local equities.
It remained under immense pressure in the absence of any firm direction and see-sawed between tepid losses and minor gains throughout the session.
The home unit tumbled to a fresh low of 64.44 in late afternoon deals before concluding the last trading day of the week at 64.40, revealing a steep loss of 14 paise, or 0.22 per cent.
The RBI, meanwhile fixed the reference rate for the dollar at 64.3686 and for the euro at 78.8902.
Globally, the US dollar traded almost flat against a basket of currencies after gaining 1.1 per cent this week.
The greenback also recovered against the yen in early European trading after falling to near four-month lows as investors sought safety in the Japanese currency.
There was limited market reaction after the US Senate approved a budget deal, including stopgap government funding bill, which was too late to prevent a federal shutdown that was already underway.
In cross-currency trades, the rupee dropped further against the pound sterling to close at 89.37 per pound from 89.30 and retreated against the euro to end at 78.84 from 78.64 earlier.
The local unit also drifted back sharply against the Japanese yen to conclude at 59.07 per yen from 58.59 earlier.
Elsewhere, the Britsh pound failed to make any headway against the US dollar despite UK's solid manufacturing growth data and hawkish tone from the Bank of England on Thursday.
In forward market today, premium for dollar displayed a mixed trend owing to lack of market moving factors.
The benchmark six-month forward premium payable in July eased to 136.50-138.50 from 137-139 paise, while the far- forward January 2019 contract ended steady at 273-275 paise.
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