Re rebounds from Friday’s record low close, rises 22p to 60.88 per $
BY Agencies6 Aug 2013 10:21 PM GMT
Agencies6 Aug 2013 10:21 PM GMT
The rupee on Monday recovered from all-time closing low to end 22 paise higher at 60.88 against the dollar amid fresh selling of the US currency by banks and exporters and inflows of foreign capital into stocks.
The rupee resumed higher at 61 per dollar from Friday's close of 61.10 at the Interbank Foreign Exchange Market and moved up to 60.72.
However, the early gains were trimmed and the rupee ended at 60.88 per dollar, a gain of 22 paise, or 0.36 per cent, on some demand from banks and importers as the US currency strengthened overseas. The rupee had lost 70 paise, or 1.16 per cent, in the previous two sessions.
Monday's gain was the most since 24 July, when the local currency added 63 paise to close at 59.13.
Foreign institutional investors purchased a net Rs 283.79 crore of shares on Friday, as per provisional figures issued by the stock exchanges. The benchmark Sensex gained 18.24 points, or 0.1 per cent, to 19,182.26.
The rupee's gains were capped as a survey showed India's private sector activity contracted for the first time in over four years in July. The HSBC India Composite Output Index, which maps services and manufacturing activity, fell to 48.4 in July, down from 50.9 in June, indicating a contraction.
'It was a mixed session for the rupee, which started the session on a slightly positive note but ended it on a weaker note,' said Abhishek Goenka, founder and CEO of India Forex Advisors. 'India's service PMI added to the weakness in rupee as the service activity fell into contraction territory.'
In the global market, the US dollar edged higher in early trade, paring losses made in the wake of below-consensus job growth.
The rupee resumed higher at 61 per dollar from Friday's close of 61.10 at the Interbank Foreign Exchange Market and moved up to 60.72.
However, the early gains were trimmed and the rupee ended at 60.88 per dollar, a gain of 22 paise, or 0.36 per cent, on some demand from banks and importers as the US currency strengthened overseas. The rupee had lost 70 paise, or 1.16 per cent, in the previous two sessions.
Monday's gain was the most since 24 July, when the local currency added 63 paise to close at 59.13.
Foreign institutional investors purchased a net Rs 283.79 crore of shares on Friday, as per provisional figures issued by the stock exchanges. The benchmark Sensex gained 18.24 points, or 0.1 per cent, to 19,182.26.
The rupee's gains were capped as a survey showed India's private sector activity contracted for the first time in over four years in July. The HSBC India Composite Output Index, which maps services and manufacturing activity, fell to 48.4 in July, down from 50.9 in June, indicating a contraction.
'It was a mixed session for the rupee, which started the session on a slightly positive note but ended it on a weaker note,' said Abhishek Goenka, founder and CEO of India Forex Advisors. 'India's service PMI added to the weakness in rupee as the service activity fell into contraction territory.'
In the global market, the US dollar edged higher in early trade, paring losses made in the wake of below-consensus job growth.
Next Story