Falling for fourth day in a row,
Indian equity benchmarks ended Tuesday's session with losses of over half
percent each, mirroring sell-off in global markets on rising coronavirus cases
across the globe. Markets made a cautious start and soon fell sharply, as
traders got anxious with CARE Ratings' a multi-sector survey showed that
business activity is unlikely to touch pre-COVID-19 levels before March 2021,
and there is a need for the government to step in and give a push to the
economy as it has not done enough till now. The smaller businesses have
reported more stress than the larger ones in the survey of over 600 companies
conducted by the agency between August 25 and September 13. However, markets
gave up most of their initial losses to come off their intraday low point in
afternoon deals, as traders found some solace with Commerce Minister Piyush
Goyal's statement that the current crisis should be used as an opportunity to
make the transition to clean energy smoother, faster, more resilient and
affordable. Traders also took a note of former Niti Aayog vice chairman Arvind
Panagariya's statement that India will need fiscal stimulus, lower interest
rates, faster bank recapitalisation and privatisation of some PSUs to return to
7 percent growth rate. Though, frontline indices unable to hold recovery mode
and resumed their downward trend in late afternoon session, tracking losses in
index-heavyweights Maruti Suzuki, Larsen & Toubro and Indusind Bank.
Traders also took a note of reports that markets regulator Sebi permitted
foreign portfolio investors (FPI) to write off shares of all the companies
which they are unable to sell. As per operational guidelines for FPIs and
designated depository participants (DDPs) issued in November 2019, write-off of
securities held by FPIs who wished to surrender their registration was
permitted only in respect of shares of companies which are unlisted/ illiquid /
suspended/ delisted. Meanwhile, India's imports from China declined by 27.63
percent during April-August this fiscal to $21.58 billion over the same period
previous year. Value of imports from China stood at $4.98 billion in August and
$5.58 in July. Finally, the BSE Sensex fell 300.06 points or 0.79% to 37,734.08,
while the CNX Nifty was down by 96.90 points or 0.86% to 11,153.65.
The US markets ended higher on
Tuesday after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank
remains committed to using our tools to do what we can, for as long as it
takes, to ensure that the recovery will be as strong as possible. A full recovery
is likely to come only when people are confident that it is safe to reengage in
a broad range of activities, Powell said in prepared remarks before the House
Financial Services Committee. He added the path forward will depend on keeping
the virus under control, and on policy actions taken at all levels of
government. US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the White House continues
to seek an agreement with both parties in Congress on another fiscal relief
package. On the economic data front, existing home sales in the US climbed to
their highest level in nearly fourteen years in the month of August, according
to a report released by the National Association of Realtors (NAR). NAR said
existing home sales jumped 2.4 percent to an annual rate of 6.000 million in
August after skyrocketing by 24.7 percent to a rate of 5.860 million in July.
The continued increase in sales matched street estimates. With the sharp
increase, existing home sales reached their highest level since December of
2006.
Crude oil futures ended higher on
Tuesday finding support from expectations for a second weekly decline in US
crude supplies. The Energy Information Administration will release its weekly
US petroleum supply report Wednesday. On average, experts polled by S&P
Global Platts expect the EIA to report a decline of 4 million barrels in
domestic crude supplies for the week ended September 18, along with a fall of
1.9 million barrels gasoline inventories and a climb of 1.2 million barrels in distillate
stockpiles. Crude oil futures for October gained 29 cents or 0.7 percent to
settle at $39.60 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. November Brent
crude rose 29 cents or 0.7% to settle at $41.72 a barrel on London's
Intercontinental Exchange.
Reversing previous two sessions'
gains, rupee tumbled against dollar on Tuesday, on account of sustained dollar
demand from importers and banks amid heavy selling in domestic equities and
strengthening American currency. Sentiments were fragile with CARE Ratings'
multi-sector survey showing that business activity is unlikely to touch
pre-COVID-19 levels before March 2021, and there is a need for the government
to step in and give a push to the economy as it has not done enough till now.
Traders took note of report that markets regulator SEBI permitted foreign
portfolio investors (FPI) to write off shares of all the companies which they
are unable to sell. On the global front; dollar rose on Tuesday to six-week
highs, extending gains from the previous session, as markets turned risk-averse
over a surge of virus cases and new lockdown measures in Europe. Finally, the
rupee ended at 73.58, 20 paise weaker from its previous close of 73.38 on
Monday.
The FIIs as per Tuesday's data
were net sellers in equity segment, while they were net buyers in debt segment.
In equity segment, the gross buying was of Rs 5460.45 crore against gross
selling of Rs 5743.85 crore, while in the debt segment, the gross purchase was
of Rs 1466.30 crore with gross sales of Rs 523.46 crore. Besides, in the hybrid
segment, the gross buying was of Rs 31.09 crore against gross selling of Rs
31.10 crore.
The US markets ended higher on
Tuesday after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank remains
committed to using our tools to do what we can, for as long as it takes, to
ensure that the recovery will be as strong as possible. Asian markets are
trading mostly lower on Wednesday as investors react to recent comments from
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell. Indian markets ended lower on Tuesday
following weakness in global peers. Today, the markets are likely to make
pessimistic start amid weakness in Asian peers. Rising coronavirus cases are
likely to dampen sentiments in the markets. With 80,391 new cases, India's
coronavirus caseload has soared to 5,640,496. Death toll has surpassed the
90,000-mark. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will chair a high-level virtual
meeting with chief ministers and health ministers of seven most-affected states
today to review the coronavirus situation. There will be some cautiousness as
the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) projected India's
economy to contract 5.9 per cent in 2020, and warned the country to not repeat
its past mistake of announcing austerity measures. It forecast the economy to
grow 3.9 per cent next year. However, easing of tensions between India and
China may provide investors some relief. In first such moves to bring down
tensions in eastern Ladakh, India and China agreed to stop sending more troops
to the frontline, refrain from unilaterally changing the situation on the
ground and avoid taking any actions that may further complicate matters. Some
support may come with ICRA's report that India's current account will swing to
a surplus of $30 billion or 1.2 percent of GDP in FY21, due to slowdown in
imports during the pandemic, making it clear that it will be a temporary
phenomenon. Besides, SEBI has set-up a technical committee on the social stock
exchange, which will develop a framework for onboarding profit and non-profit
organisations on such bourses and prescribe disclosure requirements relating to
financials and governance. There will be some reaction in power stocks as the
Union ministry of power drafted a Standard Bidding Document (SBD) for the
privatisation of the state-owned power distribution companies. Meanwhile, the
initial public offer of Angel Broking was subscribed 77 percent on the first
day of subscription on Tuesday. The Rs 600-crore public offer received bids for
1,05,01,827 shares against the issue size of 1,37,25,490 shares.
Support
and Resistance: NSE (Nifty) and BSE (Sensex)
Index
|
Previous close
|
Support
|
Resistance
|
NSE Nifty
|
11,153.65
|
11,058.14
|
11,275.69
|
BSE Sensex
|
37,734.08
|
37,440.15
|
38,118.98
|
Nifty Top volumes
Stock
|
Volume
|
Previous close (Rs)
|
Support (Rs)
|
Resistance (Rs)
|
(in Lacs)
|
Tata Motors
|
872.98
|
133.10
|
129.11
|
137.61
|
Zee Entertainment
Enterprises
|
541.61
|
197.10
|
189.51
|
208.51
|
State Bank of India
|
512.16
|
186.20
|
182.14
|
189.29
|
ICICI Bank
|
285.93
|
354.40
|
350.55
|
357.20
|
Axis Bank
|
275.58
|
412.00
|
403.31
|
423.66
|
SBI has raised Rs 7,000 crore by issuing 70,000 Basel III compliant non-convertible, taxable, redeemable debt instruments in the nature of debentures to bond subscribers.
Bajaj Finserv's wholly owned subsidiary -- Bajaj Finserv Health has launched first core offering.
TCS has expanded its partnership with Morrisons through a five-year contract for application management services, data services and cyber security services.
IOC's board has accorded approval for implementation of Petrochemical and Lube Integration Project at Indian Oil's Gujarat Refinery at an estimated cost of Rs 17,825 crore.