Sector-specific government announcements and hope of GST passage in the ongoing monsoon session of Parliament ruled the trading momentum in the midst of somewhat mixed corporate earnings numbers, while heavy FII buying failed to cheer the investors sentiment, the market went into consolidative mode on value buying amid tinge of short covering during the week.
Buying was generated due to encouraging earning season results like last weekend's bullish first quarter results of Reliance Industries and some of the key blue chips, it was supported by government's decision to pump Rs 22,915 crore into 13 PSU banks.
The IT sector saw selling pressure on poor earnings results before recovering on value buying. Banking sector saw profit-booking amid concerns over bad loans despite good earnings results.
Market player shrugged off IMF's slight drop in India's growth projections and global volatility due to geopolitical tensions and dashed hope of more stimulus following European Central Bank (ECB) monetary status quo and statement of Bank of Japan (BOJ) chief Haruhiko Kuroda's so-called 'helicopter money'.
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The Sensex opened higher at 27,920.66 and hovered between a high 28,013.50 and low of 27,637.98 before closing the week at 27,803.24, showing a slight loss of 33.26 or 0.12 per cent.
Losses were seen in Banks and Consumer Durables sector.
Buying was led by IPO, oil & gas, healthcare, realty, power, metal, IT, tech and FMCG counters.
Meanwhile, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) bought
shares whopping to Rs 2,650.57 crore during the week as per Sebi's record including the provisional figure of July 22.
In the broader market depicted strength. The BSE Mid-Cap index gained 152.04 points or 1.25 per cent to settle at 12,277.25. The BSE Small-Cap index rose 127.62 points or 1.06 per cent to settle at 12,107.31. Both these indices outperformed the Sensex.
In the 30-share Sensex pack, 18 stocks gained and 12 of them declined during the week.
Major gainer Coal India surged by 3.39 per cent and was the biggest gainer from the Sensex pack. It was followed by TCS 2.75 per cent, Tata Motors 2.74 per cent, Sun Pharma 2.25 per cent, Adani Ports 2.14 per cent, Asian Paints 1.98 per cent, Lupin 1.70 per cent, Powergrid 1.55 per cent and Bajaj Auto 1.55 per cent.
Topping the losers list along was HUL 3.91 per cent, SBI 3.48 per cent, ONGC 3.47 per cent, Wipro 3.10 per cent, Bharti Airtel 2.52 per cent and Tata Steel 2.02 per cent.
second-straight weekly fall at the domestic bullion market on the back of subdued demand from jewellers as well as persistent selling by stockists.
Lack of local buying support at existing levels and unwinding of long positions by speculative traders also added downward pressure on gold.
Elsewhere, silver after its seven-week uninterrupted gaining rally, witnessed sustained selling by stockists and investors coupled with lack of demand from industrial users, largely driven by global trend and it closed below the psychologically significant Rs 47,000 mark.
In worldwide trade, gold futures settled lower, posting losses for a second week in a row, with strength in the US dollar and stock market in the wake of the latest earnings results, dulling some of the metal's investment appeal.
But the dollar has gained ground recently on strong readings on the US labour market and inflation, which have boosted bets that Fed will raise US interest rates by year- end.