Benchmark share indices ended over 1% lower on Friday with Infosys leading the decline after disappointing March quarter earnings while the guidance for the current fiscal was also lower than Nasscom estimates.
The 30-share Sensex ended down 297 points at 27,438 and the 50-share Nifty closed 93 points lower at 8,305.
"Technically the market is still looking weak and there are no positive triggers as of now. The Nifty can test the 200-DMA level of 8,250. Further, weak monsoon forecast is also a cause for concern. In the latter half of the session lower-than-expected fourth quarter earnings of Infosys dampened sentiment," said Alex Mathew, Head of Research, Geojit BNP Financial Services.
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In the broader market, the BSE Mid-cap slipped 1.6% and Small-cap indices ended down 2.7%.
Meanwhile, according to reports the Central Board of Direct Taxes has instructed Foreign Portfolio Investors claiming treaty benefits be settled within a month.
Sectors & Stocks
Except for FMCG which ended flat all sectoral indices on the BSE ended lower with Realty and Consumer Durables being the top losers down over 3% each.
Infosys was the top Sensex loser which ended down 6%. Net profit was down 4.7% at Rs 3,097 crore while revenue was lower by 2.8% at Rs 13,411 crore for the March quarter compared to the previous quarter. Further, the company expects FY16 revenue growth between 10 – 12% in constant currency terms, which is lower than the NASSCOM estimates of 12-14%. Among its peers, TCS ended up 2.2% while Wipro ended down 3.1%.
Index heavyweight, ITC ended up 1.2%. Media reports suggest that ITC is planning to set up four food processing parks with an investment of up to Rs 250 crore each in Tamil Nadu.
ONGC rose 2.7%. ONGC has agreed to conduct tests prescribed by upstream regulator DGH to confirm three key gas discoveries in its Krishna Godavari basin block to end a standoff that stalled its USD 8 dollar project.
According to media reports, GAIL has received approval from Haryana government department for laying of a 3.85-km gas pipeline within Old industrial area, Yamunanagar for supply of gas to its prospective customers in this area. The stock ended down 1.5%.
Bank shares ended lower on concerns that unseasonal rains would lead to severe crop damages as a result of which non-performing loans in the agri-segment would rise thereby hurting profits. HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and SBI ended down 0.3-2.8% each.
According to media reports, Tata Power is focusing on overseas projects as its 4,000 MW Mundra power plant in Gujarat remains stuck in a tariff dispute that has reduced its appetite for domestic projects. The stock ended down 1.5%.
Realty major DLF shed 3.8% on reports stating the Supreme Court has issued a notice on a plea by Sebi, challenging an order of its appellate authority, Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT), in relation to the aforementioned company.
Among other shares, Shares of Symphony has dipped 20%, extending its 11% fall in past two trading sessions on the NSE, after Motilal Oswal Securities downgrade the stock with sell rating and target price of Rs 2,500.