Markets continued to trade lower with local currency precariously close to 60 levels on back of massive selling by overseas investors in the equity markets.
Global risk appetite was hampered after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke hinted towards tapering off the bond-buying programme popularly known as ‘quantitative easing’ sooner-than-expected once US economy shows sustainable signs of recovery.
At 11:35AM, the 30-share Sensex dropped 383 points at 18,861 and the 50-share Nifty shed 126 point at 5,696 levels.
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Meanwhile, the rupee weakened against the dollar in early trades on Thursday tracking weakness in the equity markets.
The currency rupee was trading at Rs 59.61 compared with previous close of Rs 58.72. It opened at Rs 59.70 and has already hit a low of Rs 59.94 so far.
The street is expecting the rupee to breach the Rs 60 per dollar mark today.
Globally, Asian stocks traded lower amid looming uncertainty over the Federal Reserve’s bond-buying plans.
The Nikkei dropped 1.6% to 13,029, Singapore Straits Times declined 2% to 3,148, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng declined 2.6% to 20,453 while China’s Shanghai Composite index was down 2% at 2,101.
Rate sensitive sectors were amongst the most hit in early trades on worries that the rising rupee would force the Reserve Bank of India to defer reduction in key policy rate going forward.
Realty index was the top loser among the sectoral indices on the BSE down 3.5% followed by Metal, Bankex, Capital Goods, Oil and Gas, Auto all down over 2% each.
In the financial segment, ICICI Bank was down 3.5% while HDFC, HDFC Bank and SBI were down over 2% each.
Among the index heavyweights ITC and Reliance Industries were both down 2% each.
The key notable movers included counters such S Mobility which is locked in upper circuit of 5% at Rs 37.10 on NSE after its board approved buyback of the company’s shares at maximum price of Rs 75 per share.
Wipro is trading higher by 1% at Rs 347 in otherwise extremely weak market on reports that the company has won a $500 million (Rs 2,900 crore) outsourcing contract from Citigroup.
The broader markets traded negatively with mid-caps and small-caps falling 1.3 per cent each on the BSE.
The market breadth was negative. Out of 1,914 stocks traded so far, 1,363 stocks declined while 442 advanced on the BSE.