By Indulal PM
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The BSE Sensex rose 1.5 percent on Thursday, snapping a three-day losing streak, as hopes the U.S. Federal Reserve would not rush into raising interest rates boosted heavyweight banks and blue chips such as Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd
Minutes from the Fed's meeting in September, published on Wednesday, appeared to signal that concerns about the dual threats of a stronger dollar and weaker global economy could potentially push back a tightening in U.S. monetary policy.
The stock market gains were the biggest since Sept. 18 and were led by blue-chip stocks hit the most during a three-session sell-off that brought the indexes to their lowest close in two months on Wednesday.
Investors now await the start of April-June earnings, with Infosys Ltd
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"Today's rally was basically mirroring the U.S. and regional stocks. Earnings would be the next key trigger. The overall sentiment is positive over the last several months, which pushed valuations," said Daljeet S Kohli, head of research, at IndiaNivesh.
"We advise clients to have a wait and watch approach and stick to quality stocks," Kohli said.
The benchmark BSE Sensex gained 1.49 percent at 26,637.28, while the broader Nifty closed up 1.5 percent at 7,960.55.
Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd
Banks were among other major gainers. State Bank of India closed 2.8 percent higher while ICICI Bank
Other infrastructure companies also rose. Larsen and Toubro
Hindalco Industries
Shares in Cummins India
However, technology stocks fell ahead of Infosys Ltd's
(Reporting by Indulal PM; Editing by Anupama Dwivedi)