The benchmark BSE Sensex on Monday cracked below the 33,000-mark by falling nearly 253 points, extending its slide for the fifth straight session on unabated foreign fund outflows amid weak global cues.
Overall market sentiment remained weak after the RBI data released after market hours on Friday showed current account deficit (CAD) rose to 2% of the GDP at $13.5 billion in the December quarter, up from 1.4% in the year-ago period, due to a higher trade deficit.
The rupee also depreciated by 19 paise intra-day against the dollar at 65.13, which too had a negative influence.
Global cues too were weak as investors moved cautiously before the U.S. Federal Reserve meeting, that is likely to raise U.S. interest rates.
The BSE 30-share barometer opened higher at 33,268.97 and advanced to 33,275.79 in morning trade on value-buying in recently battered stocks by investors.
However, across-the-board profit booking at every rise, pulled it down to a low of 32,856.54.
The 30-share index finally settled down 252.88 points or 0.76% at 32,923.12. This is the weakest closing since December 6 last when it settled at 32,597.18.
The gauge lost 741.94 points in the previous four sessions.
The wider NSE Nifty too fell by 100.90 points or 0.99% to end at 10,094.25. It shuttled between 10,224.55 and 10,075.30 during the session.
Meanwhile, on a net basis, foreign institutional investors sold equities worth ₹150.46 crore on Friday, while domestic institutional investors (DIIs) sold shares worth ₹770.53 crore, as per the provisional data.