By Abhishek Vishnoi
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The BSE Sensex slumped nearly 2.5 percent on Tuesday as lenders such as Yes Bank
The rupee's depreciation is sapping the confidence of traders who are concerned that the central bank's measures to tighten liquidity are already threatening economic growth.
The Nifty has fallen 8.1 percent since July 15, the first time that the RBI announced steps to drain cash.
The rupee's record low of 61.80 touched on Tuesday means new measures could follow or existing ones would be extended for a prolonged period to quell volatility.
Still, the after market-hours appointment of Raghuram Rajan, the chief economic adviser in the finance ministry, as RBI governor starting in early September could help support sentiment, raising expectations for a new approach.
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"My sense is liquidity tightening measures are here to stay. There cannot be any time-frame as there is no clarity on (U.S.) Fed's tapering programme," said Aneesh Srivastava, chief investment officer at IDBI Federal Life Insurance Co Ltd.
The BSE Sensex fell 2.34 percent, or 449.22 points, to end at 18,733.04. This was its biggest single-day percentage fall since June 20. It closed below the psychologically important 19,000 mark.
The Nifty slumped 2.52 percent, or 143.15 points, to end at 5,542.25, marking its lowest close since April 12.
The banking sub-index slumped 3.9 percent on continued speculation that the RBI may announce more steps to prop up the rupee.
Yes Bank fell 8.2 percent, while HDFC Bank
Financial Technologies
The Multi Commodity Exchange of India Ltd
Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd
Drug maker Lupin Ltd
Among the gainers, power equipment maker Crompton Greaves
(Editing by Prateek Chatterjee)