The euphoria even saw the 50-share NSE index breaking through the 9,100-mark to hit 9,122.75, an all-time intra-day high too.
Intra-day, the rupee flexed muscles, climbing to 66.14. Despite a sharp increase in WPI inflation, investors set aside all their caution and pumped in more money on hopes that the assembly poll win will make the government push through bold reforms.
A strong set of industrial output numbers for January provided the perfect backdrop to reap more dividends. IIP expanded 2.7 per cent year-on-year.
The gauge had gained 44 points in the previous two sessions. Markets were shut yesterday for Holi.
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The 50-scrip Nifty settled higher by 152.45 points, or 1.71 per cent, at a life-time high of 9,087, surpassing its previous record of 8,996.25 on March 3, 2015.
Foreign funds net purchased shares Rs 412.14 crore last Friday, as per the provisional figures.
February wholesale price inflation climbed to 6.55 per cent, from 5.25 per cent in the previous month. Expectations of more liquidity in bourses had a positive impact, traders said.
"The market started the day with a gap-up opening, triggered by the strong performance of the BJP in the recently held five state elections in India," said Karthikraj Lakshmanan, Senior Fund Manager - Equities, BNP Paribas Mutual Fund.
ICICI Bank was the best performer with 5.99 per cent gain. Support also came from Hindustan Unilever (4.54 per cent), L&T (4.40 per cent), HDFC Ltd (3.69 per cent), Asian Paints (3.51 per cent), Maruti Suzuki (3.02 per cent) and Adani Ports (2.92 per cent).
With the buying activity gathering momentum, second-line stocks continued their upward sprint. The BSE mid-cap and small-cap indices rose 1.43 per cent and 1.19 per cent, respectively.
Other Asian markets ended mixed while European shares remained indecisive in early session as investors awaited the start of the Federal Reserve's policy meeting.
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