Sensex drops 120 pts in late selloff; bank\, auto stocks drag

Sensex drops 120 pts in late selloff; bank, auto stocks drag

Press Trust of India  |  Mumbai 

Extending its fall for the fifth consecutive session, the gave up early gains to end 120 points lower Wednesday, as investors booked profits in banking, auto, and pharma stocks in the last hour of trade.

Sustained selling by domestic institutional investors (DIIs) and foreign institutional investors (FIIs) too dented market mood, brokers said.

The benchmark BSE index opened higher at 36,279.63 and advanced to hit a high of 36,375.80 on the back of positive macroeconomic data as fell to a 19-month low on continued decline in and positive cues from other Asian markets.

It, however, succumbed to profit-booking to touch a low of 35,962.79 on heavy selling at the fag-end. The index finally ended 119.51 points, or 0.33 per cent, lower at 36,034.11. The gauge had lost over 720 points in the previous four days.

In similar movement, the fell below 10,800 and settled the day 37.75 points, or 0.35 per cent, down at 10,793.65 after shuttling between 10,891.65 and 10,772.10 during the day.

Top losers include ONGC, SBI, PowerGrid, L&T, Yes Bank, Asian Paints, Bajaj Finance, Maruti and NTPC, falling up to 2.84 per cent.

On the other hand, gainers include Tata Motors, TCS, HDFC, HCL Tech, Infosys, ITC, and HUL, rising up to 2.18 per cent.

Sectorally, BSE bankex, auto, and ended up to 1.1 per cent lower.

Tracking overall trends, the broader markets too faced selling pressure as the BSE midcap index fell 0.52 per cent, and smallcap index shed 0.38 per cent.

Given mixed Q3 results, market is factoring further earnings downgrades, leading to outflows from FIIs and DIIs, said Vinod Nair, Head of Research,

On a net basis, FIIs sold shares worth Rs 466.78 crore and DIIs offloaded shares worth Rs 122.64 crore Tuesday, provisional data showed.

"The inflation print on Tuesday and follow-on action with bond yields falling to 7.28 per cent seem to be telegraphing an additional rate cut by the RBI, said Sunil Sharma, Chief Investment Officer,

Despite global markets trading higher as US hinted a more conciliatory stance toward China, Indian markets have not been able to sustain higher levels, suggesting caution on the part of investors and profit taking, he added.

Overseas, most Asian stocks ended higher and European equities were in a better shape on growing optimism over the prospects for a resolution to the US-trade dispute.

Japan's Nikkei surged 1.34 per cent, Shanghai Composite Index rallied 1.84 per cent, Korea's Kospi was up 0.50 per cent, Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 1.16 per cent and Singapore's Straits Times jumped 1.22 per cent.

In the zone, Frankfurt's DAX rose 0.47 per cent and Paris CAC 40 was up 0.32 per cent. London's FTSE too edged higher by 0.42 per cent.

On Wall Street, the US Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 1.49 per cent higher in Tuesday's trade.

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

First Published: Wed, February 13 2019. 16:35 IST