Market snaps three day losing streak; IT stock surge |
Frenzied buying coupled with short covering after three straight day's of fall triggered a solid spurt in late trade. Reports of Prime Minister's resignation had spooked a sell-off in mid-morning trade. Despite the rally, the market breadth remained negative. The market witnessed choppy swings throughtout the day. Global cues were mixed. Earlier today, the market saw firm start despite weak global cues, but slipped in red shortly on fresh selling. The market breadth was weak. Shares from oil, realty, declined while those from IT, FMCG and power rallied. The 30-share BSE Sensex ended up 250.59 points or 1.62% at 15,765.38 as per provisional figures. Sensex gained 300.01 points at its high of 15814.80 touched during late trade. It lost 200.72 points at day's low of 15,314.02, touched in mid-morning trade. The broader based S&P CNX Nifty was up 84.85 points or 1.85% to 4,670.45 as per provisional figures. The market breadth was negative on BSE with 1235 shares advancing as compared to 1404 that declined. 72 remained unchanged. The BSE Mid-Cap index rose 0.04% to 6399.81 and BSE Small-Cap index rose 0.29% to 7,742.61. Both these indices underperformed the Sensex. Among the 30-member Sensex pack, 23 advanced while the rest gained. BSE clocked a turnover of Rs 5578 crore today as compared to a turnover of Rs 6461.80 crore on 4 June 2008. IT stocks surged as the Indian rupee weakened further against the US dollar. Wipro (up 6.25% to Rs 528.40), Infosys (up 5.85% to Rs 1979.70), Satyam Computer Services (up 5.47% to Rs 512.20) and TCS (up 2.57% to Rs 982.75) edged higher. Power stocks advanced on fresh buying. Tata Power Company (up 7.79% to Rs 1256.65), NTPC (up 5.57% to Rs 166.65), Reliance Infrastructure (up 5.68% to Rs 1130.85) edged higher. Shares of upstream companies rallied after the subsidy burden that they have to bear became clear post fuel price hike announced yesterday, 4 June 2008, which had remained uncertain until now. Oil and Natural Gas Corporation soared 7.46% to Rs 953.20 and Gail India jumped 7.39% to Rs 398.30. Upstream oil companies ONGC and GAIL India absorb most of subsidy burden arising in the form of under-recoveries of oil marketing companies. The duo will now have to bear Rs 45,000 crore in subsidy burden, which is at historically high levels. However the public sector oil-marketing companies extended losses today after yesterday’s fuel price hike. HPCL (down 6.26% to Rs 226.30), Indian Oil Corporation (down 6.29% to Rs 391.90) and BPCL (down 7.01% to Rs 301.35) edged lower. FMCG stocks rose. Tata Tea (up 5.02% to Rs 816.30), Hindustan Unilever (up 3.23% to Rs 237.85), ITC (up 2.89% to Rs 222.35) edged higher. Jaiprakash Associates (up 3.68% to Rs 205.60), Grasim Industries (up 3.19% to Rs 2,246.30), Tata Steel (up 3.1% to Rs 840.90), ICICI Bank (up 3.09% to Rs 781.25), HDFC Bank (up 2.22% to Rs 1,243), were the top gainers from Sensex pack. Tata Motors (down 1.82% to Rs 532.60), Larsen & Toubro (down 1.6% to Rs 2,721.20), Ambuja Cements (down 1.89% to Rs 85.85), Reliance Industries (down 2.58% to Rs 2247.65), were the top losers from Sensex pack. Interest rate sensitive realty sector declined on fears of hike in interest rates or CRR after inflation may rally to double-digit post fuel price hike announced yesterday, 4 June 2008. Indiabulls Real Estate (down 1.6% to Rs 405.45), Phoenix Mills (down 3.99% to Rs 319) and DLF (down 3 % to Rs 538.45) edged lower from realty pack. India’s largest maker of utility vehicles, Mahindra and Mahindra (M&M) declined 0.92% to Rs 562.75. It announced signing an agreement to acquire 100% stake in Italy based Engines Engineering. Engines Engineering is in the business of two wheels design and developing of motorcycle prototype. India’s second largest telecom services provider Reliance Communications rose 1.3% to Rs 547.15. As per reports Reliance Communications and South Africa's MTN have begun due diligence as they inch closer to creating a global top-10 telecoms firm. Reliance Communications has also engaged Deutsche Bank for the possibility of roping in private equity firms for part of the deal, the source said. Blackstone Group Carlyle Group and Apax were interested to put in $4 billion to $5 billion, reports added. India’s largest cement maker by sales ACC rose 1.09% to Rs 639.70. Its cement shipments in May 2008 fell to 1.8 million tonnes from 1.82 million tonnes a year earlier. Production fell to 1.79 million tonnes from 1.82 million tonnes during the similar period. In a crucial development, government yesterday, 4 June 2008 agreed to raise its petrol and diesel prices by about 10% in an attempt to curb mounting losses of state-owned refiners thereby stoking inflation and risking a political backlash. After 10 days of debate over the price increase, the Cabinet also agreed to cut the import duty on crude oil to support state run refining and retailing firms. Customs duty on crude was also reduced to nil from 5%. The duty cuts would amount to Rs 22,660 crore in revenue loss, the Revenue Secretary said. Meanwhile, the ruling Left Front in West Bengal has called a 12-hour general strike today, 5 June 2008 in protest against the 'anti-people' decision of the Centre to raise the prices of petrol, diesel and cooking gas. Analysts opine that higher inflationary expectations immediately gave rise to fears of a cash reserve ratio (CRR) or interest rate hike, which is a negative for markets. European markets were trading mixed. Key benchmark indices from Frrance, and UK were down between 0.01% to 0.17%. While Germany’s DAX rose 0.24%. Asian markets were mixed today, 5 June 2008. Japan's Nikkei Singapore's Straits Times, South Korea's Seoul Composite, and China's Shanghai Composite, were down by between 0.08% to 0.65%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng and Taiwan's Taiwan Weighted were up between 0.55% to 1.28%. US markets ended mixed in volatile session yesterday, 4 June 2008. Banks fell to their lowest level in eight years on Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's warning that inflation is still a concern. Financials tumbled on rumors that Moody's May Put bond insurers AMBAC and MBIA on review for a possible credit rating downgrade. The Dow Jones industrial average slipped 12.37 points, or 0.10%, to 12,390.48. The Standard & Poor's 500 index was down 0.45 points, or 0.03%, to 1,377.20, while the Nasdaq advanced 22.66 points, or 0.91%, to 2,503.14.
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Source: Capital Market |
BSE News
Thursday, June 5, 2008
Market snaps three day losing streak; IT stock surge
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