Indian rupee paring most of its early losses ended flat on Monday, tailing the broad weakness in the global currencies overseas against dollar. The domestic currency was also impacted by the weak trade in local equity markets, where traders preferred to book profits ahead of Reserve Bank of India's policy meet on Tuesday. However, rupee recovered all its losses on expectation the RBI may not go for a rate cut and was also supported by report of sustained capital inflows in the equity markets. In the global markets, the dollar strengthened against currencies from commodity-producing nations, supported by the drop in oil prices.
Finally the rupee ended at 62.02, almost flat compared to its previous close of 62.03 on Friday. The currency touched a high and low of 62.25 and 62.04 respectively. The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) reference rate for the dollar stood at 62.13 and for Euro stood 77.36 on December 1, 2014. While, the RBI’s reference rate for the Yen stood at 52.26, the reference rate for the Great Britain Pound (GBP) stood at 97.0529. The reference rates are based on 12 noon rates of a few select banks in Mumbai.
MoneyWorks4Me is a SEBI-registered Investment Adviser (IA) dedicated to helping investors build long-term wealth through transparent, research-driven, conflict-free guidance. Founded in 2008, we started our journey as a Research Analyst (RA), providing deep fundamental analysis, intrinsic value insights, and long-term investing frameworks for Indian equities. In 2017, we transitioned to a full-fledged SEBI-registered Investment Adviser, strengthening our commitment to acting as a fiduciary—always putting the investor’s interest first.
To become India’s most trusted, research-powered fiduciary advisory platform—where every investor, regardless of experience, can make calm, confident, and well-reasoned investment decisions.
MoneyWorks4Me ensures this through: