SECOND
HALF SUBDUED
Nifty
8341 -97
Bears
appear to have gained complete grip over the market with Nifty
falling by more than 1%. Broader market too was quite weak with
Advance Decline ratio at 1:3. Stop loss for Nifty short positions may
be trailed to 8525(on close basis). In view of the steep fall over
the last Two days, a consolidation / minor pullback can be expected
before the end of the week. Nifty spot is expected to encounter
resistance at 8380,, 8415 and find support at 8300, 8265 for
Wednesday. While Global cues and Funds flow
are expected to broadly guide the market movement, based on the
present market position, market is expected to be better after the
opening movements and could experience selling / profit booking in
Second half of the day.
SENSEX ENDS BELOW 28000
Indian
markets today plunged to over one-month lows with benchmark Sensex
tumbling 322.39 points to end at 27,797.01 on losses in power, metal
and capital goods shares amid a sell-off in China and other global
markets. The NSE Nifty tanked 97.55 points to end below 8,400-mark at
8,340.70 as stocks fell for the third straight session. Fall of
global crude prices to five-year lows failed to lift the global
sentiment as Chinese stocks dropped over 5 per cent on tighter
lending norms and over 1 per cent drop in European indices, said
traders. The BSE 30-share Sensex remained in negative terrain for the
major part of the session on sustained selling pressure. It moved
between 27,763.82 and 28,157.53 range, before ending with a sharp
loss of 322.39 points, or 1.15 per cent, at 27,797.01. This is its
weakest close since October 30. In the previous two sessions, Sensex
shed 443.42 points. The overall market breadth was negative as about
900 stocks rose while over 2,000 scrips fell. "Sell-offs seen in
Asian markets...impacted market sentiments for the day. Brent crude
was seen dropping to its fresh 5-year lows, below USD 66 a barrel,"
said Hiren Dhakan, Associate Fund Manager, Bonanza Portfolio. Experts
said data showing current account deficit widened to USD 10.1
billion, or 2.1 per cent of GDP, in July-September quarter of this
fiscal, raised concerns at a time when markets are pricing are strong
recovery of the Indian economy. Sesa Sterlite shares emerged the
biggest loser among Sensex components by tumbling over 5 per cent.
Shares of state-run ONGC plunged 4.29 per cent. Other notable
laggards include Tata Power, Bharti Airtel, NTPC, Tata Steel,
Hindalco, BHEL, L&T, Tata Motors, Wipro, SBI, Cipla, Maruti
Suzuki, Axis Bank and ICICI Bank. Almost all the major Asian stock
markets fell after Chinese market tumbled 5.43 per cent, the most
since 2009. Indices in Hong Kong and Japan were among the worst-hit.
Sectorally, BSE Power index suffered the most by losing 2.75 per
cent, followed by Metal index (2.71 per cent), Capital Goods (2.29
per cent) and Consumer Durables (2.11 per cent) among others. Selling
activity in small and midcap also gathered momentum with BSE Smallcap
falling 1.59 per cent and Midcap index down 1.57 per cent. Meanwhile,
Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) bought shares worth net Rs
4,984.60 crore yesterday.
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