The domestic unit on Tuesday tumbled 99 paise to settle at 72.39. That marked its worst single-day fall since August 5 and the lowest closing level since November 13, 2018.
The domestic unit on Wednesday recovered from initial losses to settle higher by 5 paise at 71.66, extending gains for a fifth straight session.
The domestic unit on Thursday climbed 52 paise to end at 71.14 as signs of easing trade tensions between the US and China buoyed global markets.
The domestic unit on Monday recovered from day's low levels to close flat at 70.94 on Monday helped by foreign fund inflows into equities and lower global crude oil prices.
The domestic unit declined 31 paise to close at 70.87 on Monday amid rising demand for the greenback vis-a-vis other currencies overseas.
The domestic unit on Friday closed almost flat at 70.88 against after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in a widely expected move cut key interest rates by 0.25 percentage point.
The domestic unit on Wednesday gained 27 paise to settle at 72.12 in line with a recovery in domestic equities.
The domestic unit on Thursday gained 28 paise to settle at 71.84 as investor sentiment revived after China and the United States said they will resume trade talks.
The domestic unit continued its winning momentum for a third session in a row on Friday, rising 12 paise to settle at 71.72.
The domestic unit on Friday appreciated by 38 paise to close at a two-week high of 71.42 on Friday led by a rally in domestic equities and renewed hopes of the US-China trade talks.
The domestic unit on Tuesday spurted by 54 paise, its biggest single-day gain in more than five months, to close at a one-week high of 71.48.
The currency settled at 72.02 to the US dollar, the lowest closing level since November 14, 2018, even as equities spurted more than 700 points at close on stimulus measures.
On Wednesday, the domestic currency rebounded from a six-month low to end at 71.27, up 13 paise.
The government and RBI should address overvaluation
The domestic unit on Monday recovered from day's low levels to close flat at 70.94 helped by foreign fund inflows into equities and lower global crude oil prices.
The domestic unit on Wednesday dipped three paise to close at 71.04 amid rising demand for the greenback vis-a-vis other currencies overseas, even as crude oil prices eased.
The domestic unit on Friday spurted by 32 paise to close at a nearly two-month high of 70.56.
The domestic unit on Tuesday dropped 20 paise to close at 71.07 as heavy selling in domestic equities, unabated foreign fund outflows kept investors edgy.
The domestic unit on Monday depreciated by 14 paise to close at 71.02 as profit booking in domestic equities and unabated foreign fund outflows kept investors edgy.
The domestic currency on Wednesday recovered from initial losses to settle 11 paise higher at 71.43.