The Indian rupee rebounded sharply from a one-and-a-half month low hit early on Friday after Standard and Poor's raised the country's sovereign rating outlook, with the recovery in local shares also aiding.
Standard and Poor's raised the outlook for India's "BBB-minus" rating back to "stable" from "negative," saying Prime Minister Narendra Modi government's "strong" mandate would allow it to implement fiscal and economic reforms.
Indian shares snapped a three-day losing streak on Friday as rate-sensitive stocks such as IDFC Ltd jumped after the rating outlook upgrade.
"We don't have to see much immediate impact on markets following the S&P outlook upgrade but it is big news from a long-term investment perspective," said Paresh Nayar, head of currencies and fixed income at First Rand Bank.
Traders broadly expect the rupee to hold in a 60.80 to 61.80 to a dollar range next week.
The partially convertible rupee ended at 61.14/15 per dollar compared with Thursday's close of 61.34/35. The rupee fell to 61.62 earlier, its lowest since August 8.
The rupee rose 0.3 percent on the day, snapping a four-day fall and posting its biggest single-day