The domestic currency continued to witness a downward trend on the back of sustained capital outflows by foreign funds and consistent dollar demand from importers and banks.
The rupee resumed sharply lower at 64.10 per dollar at the Interbank Foreign Exchange against overnight closing level of 63.90 and drifted further to hit a new 20-month low of 64.26 per dollar.
However, fag-end recovery in domestic equities after initial sell-off as well as dollar's weakness overseas helped the local currency to bounce back before ending at 64.00 per dollar. Hiren Dhakan, Associate Fund manager, Bonanza Portfolio, said, "Among day's major market moving events, Indian Rupee touched a fresh 20-month low against the US dollar in today's trade as it has been continuously under pressure since RBI’s policy."
It touched a high of 63.98 per dollar during the trade. Foreign portfolio investors net sold shares worth Rs 727.61 crore yesterday, according to provisional data figures from the exchanges.
Meanwhile, the benchmark BSE Sensex, extending its slide for the third-consecutive day, finished lower by 23.78 points, or 0.09 per cent to 26,813.42.
Globally, the dollar was broadly lower against basket of major currencies ahead of the much awaited US weekly jobless data with the US dollar index trading down by 0.32 per cent at 95.04.