(Corrects to remove the word 'provisional' from first paragraph)
By Abhishek Vishnoi
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The BSE Sensex rose more than 1 percent on Tuesday to their highest close in three months as expectations for continued foreign buying, as part of a powerful rally in global equities, lifted blue chips such as ITC.
Global shares hit their highest level in almost five years on Tuesday, a day after the S&P 500 closed at another record high, on continued optimism over last week's strong U.S. jobs report. Japan's Nikkei average jumped 3.6 percent to its highest in nearly five years.
Hopes of foreign inflows and government efforts to revive the economy are supporting markets after the Reserve Bank of India cut interest rates for a third time this year, although it signalled little room for further policy easing.
Also Read
Foreign funds have bought a net $680 million of Indian stocks in the three sessions to May 3, taking the 2013 net buying to a total of $12.17 billion, regulatory data shows.
"Worldwide economies are reviving due to quantitative easing and countries like India should continue to benefit from portfolio flows in the medium term," said R.K. Gupta, managing director at Taurus Mutual Fund.
The BSE Sensex rose 1.09 percent, or 215.31 points, to end at 19,888.95, its highest close since January 31.
The Nifty rose 1.21 percent, or 72.50 points, to end at 6,043.55, closing above the psychologically important 6,000 level, posting its highest close since January 30.
Among blue chip stocks, ITC Ltd
Private sector lenders also gained, with ICICI Bank Ltd
DLF Ltd
Sintex Industries Ltd
Aban Offshore Ltd
Among stocks that fell, Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd
StarMine's SmartEstimates, which places greater emphasis on forecasts by top-rated analysts, expects Ranbaxy to report a profit of 1.56 billion rupees for the quarter, higher than the wider consensus mean estimate of 1.41 billion rupees.
(Editing by Anupama Dwivedi)