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Sensex falls to a fresh six-month low; rupee drops below 68-level against US dollar
Sensex stumbled for the fifth day as it touched a fresh six-month low due to continuous foreign outflows after Fed chair Janet Yellen signalled a rate hike in December policy review.
Mumbai: Sensex stumbled for the fifth day as it touched a fresh six-month low due to continuous foreign outflows after Fed chair Janet Yellen signalled a rate hike in December policy review.
The rupee too played spoilsport, dropping below the 68-level against the dollar after nearly five months to trade at 68.18 during afternoon trade, before closing at 68.13.
"Any uptick in the market is short lived as participants are shying away from taking fresh positions. The signals from US Fed on December rate hike has inflicted more pain on the rupee and equities, which was already reeling from the demonetisation," said Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit BNP Paribas Financial Services.
Sentiment took a hit after US Federal Reserve chief indicated that the central bank may hike interest rates next month, lifting the dollar to almost 14-year highs against a basket of major currencies, leading to acceleration in capital outflows by foreign funds, brokers said.
Sensex, after falling to a low of 26,106.78 on sustained foreign fund outflows, recovered briefly to touch 26,349.02, before dipping again by 77.38 points, or 0.30 percent, to 26,150.24, its lowest level since May 25, 2016.
The index has dropped by 1,367.44 points or 4.97 percent in five days on lingering worries about the economic impact of demonetisation.
For the week, the Sensex crumbled 668.58 points, or 2.49 percent, while the Nifty plunged 222.20 points, or 2.67 percent.
The NSE 50-share Nifty today moved lost 5.85 points or 0.07 percent to end at 8,074.10.
Foreign funds continued their selling spree, offloading shares worth a net Rs 983.93 crore yesterday, as per provisional data released by the stock exchanges.
Asian stocks witnessed a mixed trend. According to minutes of the European Central Bank's (ECB) most recent meeting, policymakers were ready to boost their 1.7 trillion euro stimulus again if needed to ensure that Eurozone's economy remains on its recovery path.
Key indices in Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan rose by 0.15 percent to 0.89 percent while China and South Korea fell by 0.30 percent to 0.49 percent.
European markets were showing a muted trend in their late morning session.
Sensex saw choppy trade throughout the session. After remaining under pressure in early trade, emergence of value-buying in several bluechips on increased buying by domestic financial institutions and higher opening of the European markets led the index higher, where it again succumbed to profit-booking.
Broader markets, however, outperformed the Sensex, with the BSE Mid-Cap index rising 0.61 percent and the small-cap index gaining 0.25 percent.
A total of 16 stocks in the 30-share Sensex pack ended lower, while the remaining 14 closed with gains.
Major losers were Tata Steel (2.00 percent), ITC (1.92 percent), Gail (1.76 percent), HDFC Bank (1.47 percent), Adani Ports (1.25 percent), Asian Paints (1.20 percent), ICICI Bank (1.18 percent), Infosys (1.05 percent) and HUL (1.02 percent).
However, NTPC rose by 4.58 percent, followed by Sun Pharma (2.62 percent), Bharti Airtel (2.33 percent), Hero MotoCorp (2.15 percent), M&M (1.59 percent), Bajaj Auto (1.19 percent) and Cipla (0.93 percent).
Among the sectoral indices, consumer durables fell 1.26 percent, followed by metal (1.19 percent), FMCG (0.96 percent), Bankex (0.60 percent), Teck (0.56 percent), IT (0.55 percent) and financial service (0.30 percent).
Oil&Gas rose by 1.45 percent, healthcare 1.29 percent, realty 1.26 percent, power 1.22 percent, utilities 1.07 percent and energy 1.06 percent.
Market breadth turned positive as 1,328 stocks ended higher, 1,253 finished in red while 166 ruled steady.
Total turnover on BSE stood at Rs 2,412.00 crore, lower than Rs 2,660.23 crore registered during the previous trading session.
Globally, other Asian markets ended mixed, with Shanghai Composite Index declining 0.49 percent, while Japan's Nikkei rose 0.59 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 0.37 percent.
European markets were showing a muted trend in their late morning session with key indices like London's FTSE declining 0.64 percent and France's Paris CAC dropping 0.53 percent and Germany's Frankfurt dipping 0.25 percent.