Sensex takes 267-pt hit, Nifty stumbles on oil worryline

Press Trust of India  |  Mumbai 

Equities today sank the most in six weeks as the crashed 267 points to settle below 30,000 while the climbed down from an all-time high after global weakness due to a renewed slide in crude prices.

In the process, the 30-share wiped off all its gains of yesterday. It hit a low of 29,823.60 before ending at 29,858.80, down 267.41 points, or 0.89 per cent, its biggest single day fall since March 22 when it had lost 317.77 points.



The index had risen 231.41 points in the previous session on the back of optimism that the new NPA framework will give more teeth to the RBI to tackle the burgeoning bad loans. The market also welcomed reforms in the infrastructure space in the form of the New Steel Policy as announced by the Cabinet.

The 50-issue NSE, which surpassed its previous record of 9,367.15 during the day, closed lower by 74.60 points, or 0.80 per cent, at 9,285.30, as investors took profit off the table.

On a weekly basis, both -- the and the -- logged losses of 59.60 points, or 0.19 per cent, and 18.75 points, or 0.20 per cent, respectively, for the first week of May.

hurtled down to a five-month low of USD 43.76 a barrel in New York on Friday. Sentiment soured, in line with a sluggish trend in following the drop in crude and fresh fall in commodities, including base metals, sparking concerns about the health of the global economy.

Meanwhile, President Pranab Mukherjee signed the ordinance to amend the Banking Regulation Act, giving RBI powers to direct banks to initiate insolvency and bankruptcy in case of default.

"Markets remained edgy following a sharp plunge in which also dragged metal stocks lower. Meanwhile, President's nod for NPA ordinance and expectations towards key banking amendments kept investors interested," said Anand James, Chief Market Strategist, Geojit Financial Services.

Foreign funds persisted with outflows as FIIs sold shares net worth Rs 601.13 crore in the previous session, according to provisional figures.

Shares of explorers were among the hardest hit following weaker prices, with ONGC and India slumping 2.83 per cent and 2.98 per cent, respectively.

Selling also spread to broader markets as BSE mid-cap and small-cap indices both fell.

Asian indices like China, Hong Kong and Taiwan turned weak. Markets in Japan and South Korea were shut for a public holiday.

European indices were no exception as softness in prices made investors anxious about the ongoing global recovery.

In the Sensex-30 heatmap, Tata Motors languished the most by falling 3.84 per cent, followed by Axis Bank (2.70 per cent), GAIL (2.49 per cent) and RIL (2.22 per cent).

Coming to sectors, metal fell 2.47 per cent, along with and gas, PSU, FMCG and power.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Sensex takes 267-pt hit, Nifty stumbles on oil worryline

Equities today sank the most in six weeks as the Sensex crashed 267 points to settle below 30,000 while the Nifty climbed down from an all-time high after global weakness due to a renewed slide in crude prices. In the process, the 30-share Sensex wiped off all its gains of yesterday. It hit a low of 29,823.60 before ending at 29,858.80, down 267.41 points, or 0.89 per cent, its biggest single day fall since March 22 when it had lost 317.77 points. The index had risen 231.41 points in the previous session on the back of optimism that the new NPA framework will give more teeth to the RBI to tackle the burgeoning bad loans. The market also welcomed reforms in the infrastructure space in the form of the New Steel Policy as announced by the Cabinet. The 50-issue NSE, which surpassed its previous record of 9,367.15 during the day, closed lower by 74.60 points, or 0.80 per cent, at 9,285.30, as investors took profit off the table. On a weekly basis, both -- the Sensex and the ... Equities today sank the most in six weeks as the crashed 267 points to settle below 30,000 while the climbed down from an all-time high after global weakness due to a renewed slide in crude prices.

In the process, the 30-share wiped off all its gains of yesterday. It hit a low of 29,823.60 before ending at 29,858.80, down 267.41 points, or 0.89 per cent, its biggest single day fall since March 22 when it had lost 317.77 points.

The index had risen 231.41 points in the previous session on the back of optimism that the new NPA framework will give more teeth to the RBI to tackle the burgeoning bad loans. The market also welcomed reforms in the infrastructure space in the form of the New Steel Policy as announced by the Cabinet.

The 50-issue NSE, which surpassed its previous record of 9,367.15 during the day, closed lower by 74.60 points, or 0.80 per cent, at 9,285.30, as investors took profit off the table.

On a weekly basis, both -- the and the -- logged losses of 59.60 points, or 0.19 per cent, and 18.75 points, or 0.20 per cent, respectively, for the first week of May.

hurtled down to a five-month low of USD 43.76 a barrel in New York on Friday. Sentiment soured, in line with a sluggish trend in following the drop in crude and fresh fall in commodities, including base metals, sparking concerns about the health of the global economy.

Meanwhile, President Pranab Mukherjee signed the ordinance to amend the Banking Regulation Act, giving RBI powers to direct banks to initiate insolvency and bankruptcy in case of default.

"Markets remained edgy following a sharp plunge in which also dragged metal stocks lower. Meanwhile, President's nod for NPA ordinance and expectations towards key banking amendments kept investors interested," said Anand James, Chief Market Strategist, Geojit Financial Services.

Foreign funds persisted with outflows as FIIs sold shares net worth Rs 601.13 crore in the previous session, according to provisional figures.

Shares of explorers were among the hardest hit following weaker prices, with ONGC and India slumping 2.83 per cent and 2.98 per cent, respectively.

Selling also spread to broader markets as BSE mid-cap and small-cap indices both fell.

Asian indices like China, Hong Kong and Taiwan turned weak. Markets in Japan and South Korea were shut for a public holiday.

European indices were no exception as softness in prices made investors anxious about the ongoing global recovery.

In the Sensex-30 heatmap, Tata Motors languished the most by falling 3.84 per cent, followed by Axis Bank (2.70 per cent), GAIL (2.49 per cent) and RIL (2.22 per cent).

Coming to sectors, metal fell 2.47 per cent, along with and gas, PSU, FMCG and power.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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