Nifty closes below 10,000, Sensex sinks 450 points, bank, metal stocks fall

BSE Sensex fell 448 points, or 1.38%, to 31,922, while the Nifty 50 lost 158 points, or 1.56%, to close at 9,964.
PTI
BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty closes lower on Friday. Photo: Mint
BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty closes lower on Friday. Photo: Mint

Mumbai: Stock benchmarks on Friday came under panic attack and closed the day with losses of over 1% due to fears of fiscal maths going haywire because of an imminent government spending push to revive the economy.

The risk-off mode was on full display in light of a fresh war of words that broke out between the US and North Korea. US President Donald Trump is “mentally deranged” and will “pay dearly” for his threat to destroy North Korea, the communist country said as its foreign minister hinted that the regime may explode a hydrogen bomb over the Pacific Ocean.

From the very start, which saw a lower opening, the Sensex kept rolling down before settling lower by 447.60 points, or 1.38%—its biggest single-day fall since 15 November, 2016—at 31,922.44. The loss was the largest in nearly 10 months. This is also the weakest closing since 11 September when the index had come in at 31,882.16. It had lost 53.72 points in the previous three days.

The broader Nifty cracked below the psychologically important 10,000-mark to hit a low of 9,952.80 before ending at 9,964.40, down 157.50 points, or 1.56%—the single-biggest loss since 15 November, 2016. This was the lowest closing since 8 September. On a weekly basis, the BSE recorded a hefty fall of 350.17 points, or 1.08%, the biggest since 11 August. The NSE, too, ended lower by 121 points, or 1.19%, for the week.

“With global equity markets in risk-off mode over Korean tensions, the ongoing weakness has gained more momentum. Approaching F&O expiry has added to liquidation pressure. With FIIs continuing to be net sellers, investors are fretting on the impact on fiscal deficit targets if the government were to go overdrive with economic revival plans,” said Anand James, chief market strategist, Geojit Financial Services Ltd.

The rupee was in a sticky spot in the beginning, which dropped to a near six-month low against the dollar during the day, on liquidity concerns after the US Fed said it will roll back its massive stimulus and speculation of a widening fiscal deficit. But later, the domestic currency managed to recover. Finance minister Arun Jaitley on Thursday had promised “appropriate actions” at the “right time” to revive the slowdown-hit economy as growth slipped to a three-year low of 5.7% in the June quarter.

Sentiment was in tatters after heavy losses in Asia, set off by China sovereign rating downgrade on fears over its ballooning debt and a lower opening in Europe.

Shares have lost their momentum after hitting record highs recently as valuations turned expensive, with most sectoral indices ending in the red. Tata Steel was the top Sensex loser, skidding 4.70% to close at Rs654.55, followed by L&T, which fell 3.49%. Others that weighed included Reliance Industries, ICICI Bank, Hero MotoCorp, SBI and Adani Ports.

There was no let-up in foreign selling as foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold shares worth Rs1,204.95 crore while domestic institutional investors (DIIs) bought equities worth a net Rs1,416.55 crore on Thursday, as per provisional data.

BSE realty melted the most by 4.29%. Metal, capital goods and power too added to the weakness. Selling pressure rubbed off on broader markets, which dragged down small-cap and mid-cap indices by 2.93% and 2.71%, respectively.