Indian stocks climbed, with the benchmark gauge extending last week's advance, before the important Budget session of Parliament begins on Tuesday.
Hindustan Unilever, the largest personal-products company, rallied the most in 13 months. Sun Pharmaceutical Industries rose to become the best-performing stock on the S&P BSE Sensex this year. Reliance Industries, the owner of the world's largest refining complex, climbed for a second day. ITC slid to near a three-year low amid concern the government may raise taxes on tobacco products.
Read our full coverage on Union Budget 2016
The Sensex added 0.3 per cent, or 79.64 points, to close at 23,788.79, extending last week's 3.2 per cent rally, which was the steepest in four months. Investors are looking ahead to the Budget on Monday for clarity on the government's plan to lower the corporate tax rate and phase out tax breaks.
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"The budget must focus on boosting expenditure to get growth back on track, instead of focusing only on fiscal consolidation. Higher growth itself will take care of the fiscal deficit."
Budget Deficit
Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect Finance Minister Arun Jaitley to meet the fiscal deficit target for the year ending March 31, while slightly pushing back next year's goal to 3.6 percent of gross domestic product. Stock markets would overlook the widening in the budget gap up to 3.8 percent if the funds are used for public spending, Kotak said.
Hindustan Unilever surged 4.1 percent, the most since Jan. 21, 2015 and the best performer on the Sensex on Monday. Dabur India Ltd. added 1.7 percent. Britannia Industries Ltd. advanced 2.8 percent to take gains in the past year to 36 percent.
Jaitley is expected to make a decision on whether to implement the planned $15 billion salary hike for government employees, which would affect consumer goods companies.
"Investors are speculating that the government will announce measures to boost consumption," Arun Kejriwal, a director at Kejriwal Research & Investment Pvt. in Mumbai, said by phone. "The finance minister is likely to announce the increase in pension for retired army men and salary increases for federal employees. Such steps would be good for consumer stocks."
Sun Pharmaceutical increased 2.1 percent to its highest level since Oct. 30. Reliance gained 1.9 percent, extending last week's 4.2 percent advance.
Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. tumbled 1.6 percent in a third day of declines after unrest in Haryana state forced the nation's top carmaker to close some plants. A disruption to component supplies amid demonstrations over caste rights led to a weekend halt in output at its Manesar and Gurgaon factories that jointly produce about 5,000 vehicles a day.
ITC fell 1.5 percent. NTPC Ltd., India's biggest power producer, slid 2.2 percent. Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone Ltd. declined for a third day.
Overseas investors sold a net $43 million of Indian stocks on Feb. 17, taking this year's outflow to $2.5 billion. They bought $3.3 billion of shares last year, the smallest in four years.
The Sensex has retreated 9 percent this year and trades at 14.9 times its estimated 12-month earnings, versus a multiple of 10.9 for the MSCI Emerging Markets Index.