ADVERTISEMENT

Market ends flat after RBI rate cut; rate-sensitive stocks turn volatile

February 07, 2019 05:09 pm | Updated 05:09 pm IST - Mumbai

Benchmark equity indices gave up gains to end almost flat on Thursday as investors booked profits at higher levels, after the the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) surprisingly reduced the repo rate by 0.25%.

After rising nearly 200 points, the 30-share BSE Sensex ended 4.14 points, or 0.01%, lower at 36,971.09; while the broader Nifty settled 6.95 points, or 0.06%, higher at 11,069.40.

India VIX, the fear gauge for domestic equities, rose 1.40%.

ADVERTISEMENT

Rate-sensitive stocks swung between gains and losses after the rate-cut announcement, with BSE realty index slipping 0.02%, Bankex gaining 0.04% and auto index soaring 1.77%.

The RBI cut the repo rate by 0.25% to 6.25% on expectation that inflation will stay within its target range, a move that may make home and other loans cheaper.

The RBI, under its new Governor Shaktikanta Das, changed the monetary policy stance to ‘neutral’ from the earlier ‘calibrated tightening’, signalling further softening of rates if inflation remain benign.

ADVERTISEMENT

From stock market point of view, the policy decision is already discounted in indices. Traders are looking to book some profit from here, which can push indices to lower levels, said Debabrata Bhattacharjee, Head of Research, CapitalAim.

“In a medium-term, market has always reacted positively to a rate cut. Since we are in an environment where RBI is now neutral with a focus to keep growth in an economy and tab on inflation, we may attract long term money that can move the market.

“This is a positive event for the market though on a cautious note — we have an election in the next three months. So that needs to be taken into account,” Mustafa Nadeem, CEO, Epic Research, said.

In the Sensex pack, Sun Pharma was the biggest gainer, rallying 4.48%, followed by Bajaj Auto, Tata Motors, Coal India, Hero MotoCorp, Maruti and HCL Tech, rising up to 3.01%.

While, RIL, PowerGrid, HDFC, L&T, IndusInd Bank, NTPC and Bajaj Finance declined up to 1.50%.

On a net basis, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) bought shares worth a net of ₹694.97 crore Wednesday, and domestic institutional investors (DIIs) were net buyers to the tune of ₹525.26 crore, provisional data available with BSE showed.

Elsewhere in Asia, Japan’s Nikkei fell 0.59%, while Korea’s Kospi ended flat. Bourses in China were closed for Lunar New Year break.

In the Eurozone, Frankfurt’s DAX was down 0.48% and Paris CAC 40 fell 0.30% in late morning deals; while London’s FTSE was up 0.18%.

The rupee, meanwhile, appreciated 11 paise against the U.S. dollar to 71.45 intra-day.

The benchmark Brent crude futures rose 0.06% to $62.73 per barrel.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT