By Abhishek Vishnoi
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The BSE Sensex fell for a second consecutive session on Wednesday to its lowest close since April 18 as lenders such as Axis Bank
The annual consumer price inflation slowed for the third straight month in May to 9.31 percent, government data showed on Wednesday, but still remained well above the RBI's comfort level.
At the same time, April factory data showed industrial output grew less than expected at 2 percent, but not slow enough to spur the RBI to cut rates at its policy review on June 17.
Although foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have remained net buyers of Indian shares worth 9.62 billion rupees so far in June, a closer look reveals the pace of flows has slowed if compared to the average monthly buying of 166.41 billion rupees seen in 2013 till May-end.
"I think the simple expectation out of the market is that since it's an oversold market it will probably carry the tendency of bouncing back in between on any positive news," said Deven Choksey, managing director of K. R. Choksey Securities in Mumbai.
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"Currently, even though the bias is on the downside, you could expect some upside on positive news."
The BSE Sensex fell 0.53 percent, or 101.87 points, to 19,041.13.
The broader Nifty lost 0.49 percent, or 28.60 points, to 5,760.20.
Lenders lost ground as high retail inflation in May was seen virtually shutting the door on a rate cut next week, especially after a sliding rupee has reignited current account deficit concerns.
Axis Bank Ltd
Blue chips such as ITC Ltd
FIIs provisionally sold 8.85 billion rupees worth of Indian stocks on Tuesday, marking their biggest single-day sale since February 28, exchange data showed.
IT stocks fell after India said it was considering measures to stabilise the rupee after the local currency hit an all-time low on Tuesday.
Infosys Ltd
Titan Industries Ltd
Wockhardt Ltd
However, among stocks that gained, Jindal Steel and Power Ltd
(Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)