Continuing its freefall for the sixth day in a row, the Sensex today slid 209 points at a one-month low of 20,281.91 before the release of industrial production and consumer inflation data. It has shed over 957 points since ending at the record close of 21,239.36 on November 3.
Over the past few sessions, stocks markets have been affected by fears of Fed tapering its USD 85 billion a month stimulus, profit-booking by investors and rating agency S&P's warning that India could be downgraded if the next government fails to reverse slide in economic growth.
The rupee is just 29 paise away from 64-mark. The currency had closed below the 64-level on August 21, 2013.
"I think a crazy, irrational kind of a sentiment is (prevailing in the forex market)... Whoever is punting on rupee will loose very heavily," Economic Affairs Secretary Arvind Mayaram said today.
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The Indian currency started declining last week as oil refiners resumed part of their dollar purchases from the market, Mayaram had earlier said.
After markets closed, government data showed retail inflation entered double digits at 10.09 per cent in October while industrial production rose 2 per cent in September.
"Continuing concerns over the Fed taper, rupee depreciation, high bond yields and expectations of a sustained high CPI inflation number were the reasons for the fall," said Dipen Shah, Head of Private Client Group Research, Kotak Securities.