Indices closed up for the second straight session today driven by short covering in the December derivatives contract due for expiry Thursday. |
According to dealers, the near 400-point fall in the Sensex early this week also helped bring valuations to reasonable levels and attract some fresh institutional investment over the past two sessions. |
The Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensex ended at 13,472, up 87 points or 0.6%, while the National Stock Exchange's Nifty closed at 3,871, up 38 points or nearly 1 per cent. |
Intraday, the indices moved in a tight range. The Sensex touched high and low of 13,494 and 13,362, respectively, while Nifty moved between 3,880 and 3,823. |
Among second line indices, CNX Midcap Index ended nearly 1 per cent up at 5,017. On the BSE, the 'A' group comprising frontliners saw 67 per cent of shares gaining. |
However, the trend between the second line indices was not very impressive with only a little over 50 per cent of shares in both 'B1' and 'B2' rising. |
"I believe the Sensex will continue to remain fairly valued with enough scope for additional investment only if it stays below the 14,000 mark for another 2-3 months," Rajen Shah, chief investment officer at Angel Broking, said. |
Among key corporate developments today, British telecom major Vodafone confirmed its interest in buying a stake in Hutchison Essar, the fourth biggest mobile operator in India. |
Bharti Airtel, in which Vodafone holds a 10 per cent stake, ended marginally up at Rs 615 after briefly shedding around 1 per cent on worries Vodafone may cut stake while bidding for Hutchison. |
HDFC Bank was also in the news today for hiking its prime lending rate by 150 basis points to 13 per cent in reaction to a 50 basis points hike in the cash reserve ratio by the Reserve Bank of India earlier this month. |