Sensex drops 186 points on weak China data, US stimulus cut fears

February 20, 2014 04:55 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 06:33 pm IST - Mumbai

The benchmark Sensex fell for the first time in five days to end about 186 points lower on Thursday on broad-based selling after global markets slipped amid downbeat Chinese manufacturing data and fears of more U.S. stimulus cuts.

After gaining nearly 530 points in the past four sessions, the Sensex dropped 186.33 points, or 0.90 per cent, to 20,536.64 as recent gainers in the banking, metal and oil & gas packs ended in the red.

Just six constituents like Dr Reddy’s and Bajaj Auto of the 30-share Sensex managed to end up. ICICI Bank, Bharti Airtel and Tata Steel led the 24 laggards in the bluechip index, which had yesterday closed near one-month highs.

The 50-scrip NSE index Nifty dropped 61.30 points, or one per cent, to end at 6,091.45. In the past four days, it had gained over 150 points.

Global stocks witnessed a volatile session after HSBC and Markit Economics said their index of Chinese manufacturing fell to 48.3 from January’s final figure of 49.5. A number below 50 indicates contraction.

The Chinese data spooked investors who were nervous after minutes of the U.S. Fed’s January gathering released yesterday showed several policy makers were in favour of stimulus cuts.

“Global markets were showing selling pressure, post weaker manufacturing data in China and also because of U.S. Federal Reserve indicating continuation of tapering of stimulus, This, along with profit booking after recent rally, led to selling pressure in India too,” said Rakesh Goyal, Senior Vice President, Bonanza Portfolio.

Sectoraly, the BSE Banking sector index suffered the most by losing 1.63 per cent as SBI plunged 1.80 per cent, ICICI Bank by 2.15 per cent and HDFC Bank by 0.99 per cent.

The metal sector index dropped by 1.01 per cent after Tata Steel lost 1.80 per cent, Hindalco 1.52 per cent and Sesa Sterlite by 0.48 per cent. Overall, 10 of the 12 sectoral indices closed down. Capital goods and power barometers were the two which ended higher.

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