Apparently, the government's decision to scrap minimum alternate tax -- which is being hailed as a "bold step" -- was not enough to save the day.
The markets were off to a promising start, but all the gains were gone in a flash after it became clear that the China contagion is spreading with alarming intensity, with the US and Europe throwing up weak factory numbers.
On Tuesday, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the government has accepted the recommendation of a panel headed by Law Commission Chairman A P Shah and decided to exempt FIIs from MAT claims prior to April 1, 2015.
Lacklustre domestic macros showing a slowing GDP growth for the June quarter and a drop in manufacturing PMI added to the risk-off sentiment.
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The BSE Sensex, helped by value-buying in realty, FMCG, IT and technology, scaled the day's high of 25,939.37, before closing down 242.88 points, or 0.95 per cent, at 25,453.56 -- its lowest close since August 8, 2014.
"Fresh data out of China showing Chinese factory activity contracted in August coupled with uncertainty over Fed's decision on raising interest rates in a meeting later this month are causing jitters across the globe," said Shreyash Devalkar, Fund Manager-Equities, BNP Paribas Mutual Fund.
BHEL bore the brunt of the sell-off, tumbling as much as 5.10 per cent as M&M, ONGC, SBI and Coal India ended in the red.
In the sectoral space, power took the biggest blow, followed by PSU, banking, capital goods, auto and metal.
Asian markets ended mixed as premier indices in China, Japan and Singapore closed lower by up to 1.18 per cent.
Key indices in France, Germany and the UK traded lower by up to 0.37 per cent.