Breaking |

Breaking |

Rupee down 6 paise against dollar in early trade
Published : Jun 9, 2017, 5:44 am IST
Updated : Jun 9, 2017, 5:44 am IST
SHARE ARTICLE

Mumbai: In line with domestic equities, the rupee opened 6 paise lower at 64.27 a dollar in early trade today due to increased demand for the US currency from importers and banks amid cautious global sentiment. Forex dealers said US dollar's gains against rivals overseas in the wake of a string of developments at the global level also had an impact of the rupee.

Mumbai: In line with domestic equities, the rupee opened 6 paise lower at 64.27 a dollar in early trade today due to increased demand for the US currency from importers and banks amid cautious global sentiment. Forex dealers said US dollar's gains against rivals overseas in the wake of a string of developments at the global level also had an impact of the rupee.     

Global investors appeared cautious in view of exit polls suggesting chances of hung Parliament in the UK, while the testimony by former FBI Director James Comey before the US senate also affected global trading. Yesterday, the rupee had appreciated by 12 paise against the American currency to end at a three-week high of 64.21 on sustained dollar selling by exporters and banks.Meanwhile, the benchmark BSE Sensex fell by 112.14 points or 0.35 per cent to 31,101.22 in early deals today. PTI 

Advertisement

SHARE ARTICLE
Advertisement
Advertisement

Punjab Weather Monsoon Update: Situation worsens in Punjab after rainfall, Punjab Heavy Rain

11 Jul 2025 3:56 PM

Drainage issue of Kharar— Will MLA Anmol Gagan Maan Solve? exclusive interview

11 Jul 2025 3:52 PM

Photos of Jaspreet, Killed in Tailor Murder Case Encounter, Surface Showing Him Posing with Weapons

10 Jul 2025 6:17 PM

Abohar Tailor Murder Case Sanjay Verma, photo of Sandeep Jakhar with the accused in the Abohar case

10 Jul 2025 6:11 PM

Gujarat's Vadodara: 43-Year-Old Bridge Collapses

09 Jul 2025 3:58 PM

In Punjab, brazen youths tried to dump a girl's body in a sack – locals caught them

09 Jul 2025 3:44 PM
Advertisement