New Delhi: Benchmark BSE Sensex and Nifty slid by nearly 1 per cent on Tuesday due to profit booking in IT, banking and FMCG shares ahead of the expected aggressive rate hike by the US Federal Reserve. Marking its second straight day of losses, the 30-share BSE benchmark declined by 497.73 points or 0.89 per cent to settle at 55,268.49, with 22 of its constituents ending in the red.


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During the day, it tanked 562.79 points or 1 per cent to a low of 55,203.43. (ALSO READ: Ashneer Grover feels Zomato shares would be Rs 450 if…: His hypothetical situation gets mixed reactions) 


The broader NSE Nifty declined by 147.15 points or 0.88 per cent to 16,483.85 after 38 of its stocks succumbed to profit taking. Nifty had risen by over 5 per cent in the six-day rally to Friday. (ALSO READ: HCL CEO C Vijayakumar becomes highest-paid Indian IT CEO: Here’s how much he made last year) 


IT major Infosys fell the most by 3.4 per cent among Sensex stocks. Wipro declined by 2.28 per cent, HCL Tech by 1.74 per cent, Tech Mahindra by 1.68 per cent and TCS by 1.62 per cent.


Banking stocks also took a hit with Axis Bank falling by 3 per cent, Kotak Bank by 2.07 per cent, and SBI by 0.67 per cent. HDFC twins and ICICI Bank also declined.


HUL, Dr Reddy's, L&T, Titan, Nestle, Tata Steel, Maruti and Sun Pharma were also among the losers.


On the other hand, Bajaj Finserv bucked the trend, spurting by 5.58 per cent. Bharti Airtel and Reliance Industries also advanced as the spectrum auction started on Tuesday.


The Fed's meeting commencing Tuesday, which is expected to maintain its aggressive rate hike of 75 bps (basis points), and recession fears, especially in western markets, weighed on market sentiment, said Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services.


"Even though the domestic market is showcasing strength, the spillover effect from the western market is inevitable," Nair added.


Investors are worried that aggressive rate hikes by the US Fed and similar action by central banks in Europe and Asia may hurt global economic growth, analysts said.


"Participants were in the profit-taking mood from the beginning which resulted in a gradual decline in the index. Apart from the mixed earnings, caution ahead of the US Fed meet and GDP data was also weighing on the sentiment," Ajit Mishra, VP - Research, Religare Broking Ltd said.


In the broader market, the BSE midcap gauge declined by 1.21 per cent and smallcap index fell by 1.20 per cent.


All the BSE sectoral indices ended lower, with IT falling the most by 2.84 per cent, followed by teck (2.23 per cent), FMCG (1.32 per cent) and capital goods (1.28 per cent).


"Domestic equities saw a lacklustre movement and traded in negative territory throughout the day amid weak global cues. Nifty opened flat and fell right from the initial tick amid selling pressure," said Siddhartha Khemka, Head - Retail Research, Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd.


Global stock markets were mixed ahead of the expected sharp interest rate hike by the US Federal Reserve to tame inflation which has soared to a four-decade high of 9.1 per cent.


In Asia, markets in Tokyo ended marginally lower, while Shanghai, Seoul and Hong Kong settled higher.


Markets in Europe were trading mostly lower during mid-session deals. The US markets had ended on a mixed note on Monday. Meanwhile, international oil benchmark Brent crude jumped 1.38 per cent to 106.6 per barrel. Foreign institutional investors offloaded shares worth Rs 844.78 crore on Monday, as per exchange data.