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Sensex at one-week high, up 186 points as US rate fears recede

For the week, both indices, Sensex and Nifty, posted first fall in three by slipping 198.22 points or 0.68 percent, and 86.85 points or 0.97 percent, respectively.

Sensex at one-week high, up 186 points as US rate fears recede

Mumbai: Rising for a third straight session, the BSE Sensex jumped over 186 points Friday to close at a one-week high of 28,599.03 on across-the-board gains amid firm global cues on receding fears of a US interest rate hike.

Sentiment remained upbeat for the better part of the day on account of positive Asian cues, tracking overnight gains on the US bourses after another round of below-par US data dimmed expectations for a Federal Reserve rate hike this month.

Meanwhile, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today expressed hope that the RBI will keep in mind the decline in retail inflation while deciding on interest rates at its policy review meeting on October 4.

"FM's review of quarterly performance of state-run banks talked up the chances of more capital infusion, lifting public sector banks stocks earlier in the day," said Anand James, Chief Market Strategist, Geojit BNP Paribas Financial.

However, almost half of the session's gains were wiped-off on profit-booking at higher levels and a lower opening in the European markets.

For the week, both indices, Sensex and Nifty, posted first fall in three by slipping 198.22 points or 0.68 percent, and 86.85 points or 0.97 percent, respectively.

The 30-share Sensex zoomed 186.14 points or 0.66 percent to close at 28,599.03, its highest closing since September 9, when it had closed at 28,797.25.

The NSE Nifty, which again went past the 8,800-mark to touch a high of 8,847.65 intra-day, failed to maintain its key levels and slipped to hit a low of 8,750.50 before closing 37.30 points, or 0.43 percent, higher at 8,779.85.

Shares of state-run oil companies such as Indian Oil, BPCL and HPCL rose between 2.01 percent and 0.73 percent after the petrol price hike.

In line with the overall trend, small-cap index ended 0.15 percent higher, but mid-cap index fell 0.32 percent.

In regional markets, Japan's Nikkei closed higher 0.70 per cent, while Singapore's was up 0.78 percent. Markets in Hong Kong, China, Taiwan and South Korea remained closed today for public holidays.

European stocks were trading lower weighed down by losses in financial sector. Key indices in France and Germany dropped by 0.30 percent to 0.34 percent, while the UK's FTSE was quoted up by 0.03 percent.