Mumbai, India (BBN) - Domestic shares in India dropped for a third straight session on Wednesday as banking and automobile shares fell, while regional markets were trading lower tracking overnight losses on Wall Street on doubts over US President Donald Trump's economic policies.
At 1:55pm, the 30-share BSE index Sensex was down 217.90 points or 0.74 per cent at 29,267.55 and the 50-share NSE index Nifty was down 64.2 points or 0.7 per cent at 9,057.30, reports The Hindu Business Line.
Barring realty, all other BSE sectoral indices were trading in the red.
Among them, consumer durables index fell the most by 1.72 per cent, auto 1.32 per cent, metal 1.12 per cent and banking 0.76 per cent, while realty index was up 0.86 per cent.
Top five Sensex losers were Bharti Airtel (-3.16 per cent), ICICI Bank (-1.95 per cent), Tata Motors (-1.87 per cent), M&M (-1.8 per cent) and Maruti (-1.44 per cent), while the major gainers were Axis Bank (+1.14 per cent), Dr Reddy's (+0.91 per cent), Wipro (+0.74 per cent), and Cipla (+0.52 per cent).
ASIAN SHARES
Asian stocks fell as doubts on Trump's economic growth agenda prompted investors to dump risky assets in search of safe havens such as government bonds.
Wall Street fell sharply on Tuesday with the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average losing over 1 per cent in their worst one-day performances since before Trump's election victory in November.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 1.3 per cent.
“The news from the US was the trigger today, but we were expecting corrective and sideways movement as the market was already in an overbought zone. Nifty is consolidating.
Midcap stocks have done good run-up and some profit-booking cannot be ruled out,” said Vaishali Parekh, research analyst at Prabhudas Lilladher Pvt Ltd.
“Stocks in the metal and banking sectors had run up to a great extent and these sectors are feeling the pressure now," added Parekh.
On the Nifty 50, financial stocks contributed most to the losses, led by index heavyweight ICICI Bank which was down 1.6 per cent.
The Nifty Finance index declined for a fourth consecutive session.
Auto stocks also lost traction with Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd and Tata Motors falling 1.51 per cent and 1.53 per cent, respectively, to pull down the NSE index.
Telecom services provider Bharti Airtel was among the top losers on both the NSE and BSE indices, slipping around 3 per cent.
Market rumours that the company is planning to hike capex to Rs 30,000 crore in FY18 to take on the newly-formed Idea-Vodafone combine may be the reason behind the movement, said an analyst covering the stock, who did not wish to be named.
Only four stocks gained on the Nifty index with Axis Bank, up 1.58 per cent, leading the pack.
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