The central bank had intervened to manage the impact of foreign outflows.
The Indian rupee is expected to hold near all-time lows on Monday amid possible outflows related to the Hyundai Motors India initial public offering and foreign equity outflows.

The one-month non-deliverable forward indicated that the rupee will open barely changed from the last close of 84.0650 and not too far away from the 84.0775 lifetime low.

For the rupee, the dip past 84 after holding near the level for a number of weeks has been fairly uneventful. Last week, the currency traded in a narrow 10-paisa range.

The Reserve Bank of India is trying to make sure that volatility remains muted, intervening regularly to control the pace at which the rupee depreciates. The RBI all through Friday' session supported the rupee, which dipped to an all-time low.

The RBI's defence of the rupee likely spurred the biggest weekly decline in India forex reserves in more than two years. In the week through Oct. 11 when the rupee weakened past 84 for the first time ever, India's forex reserves fell by USD 10.75 billion, data released by the central bank showed.

The central bank had intervened to manage the impact of foreign outflows. Overseas investors have taken out USD 9.2 billion from local equities so far this month amid paring of India allocations in favour of China.

"You would think that these outflows are likely to persist this week. In addition, you may have the Hyundai money moving out," a currency trader at a bank said.

He was referring to the Hyundai Motor India's USD 3.3-billion initial public offering. Its parent Hyundai Motor is likely to take the money out, possibly this week, traders said.

Meanwhile, Asian currencies were mostly higher. China cut its key lending rates, as expected, at the monthly fixing.