Sensex, Nifty cautious in early trade amid weak global cues, fund outflows

Top gainers in early session included ICICI Bank, Kotak Bank, L&T, M&M

October 09, 2019 10:36 am | Updated 10:43 am IST - Mumbai

Kolkata: Sharebrokers and holders check the Sensex and Nifty at a Share market in Kolkata on Friday. Domestic equities took a beating amid a global selloff after US President Donald Trump imposed USD 60 billion tariffs on Chinese imports, a move that has fuelled concerns of an international trade war. PTI Photo(PTI3_23_2018_000181A)

Kolkata: Sharebrokers and holders check the Sensex and Nifty at a Share market in Kolkata on Friday. Domestic equities took a beating amid a global selloff after US President Donald Trump imposed USD 60 billion tariffs on Chinese imports, a move that has fuelled concerns of an international trade war. PTI Photo(PTI3_23_2018_000181A)

Equity benchmark BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty were trading on a cautious note in morning trade on October 9 amid growing uncertainty over U.S.-China trade talks and unabated foreign fund outflows.

The 30-share index was trading 36.04 points or 0.10% higher at 37,568.02 in the early trade; while the broader Nifty was almost flat with positive bias at 11,127.40, showing a marginal gain of 1.00 points or 0.01%.

Top Sensex gainers in early session included ICICI Bank, Kotak Bank, L&T, M&M, IndusInd Bank, Asian Paints and HDFC Bank, rising up to 1.39%. On the other hand, top losers were Yes Bank, HCL Tech, ONGC, Hero MotoCorp, TCS, Tata Steel and Infosys, falling up to 8.33 %.

Stock markets were closed on Tuesday on account of ‘Dussehra’

On Monday, the Sensex settled at 37,531.98 points, down by 141.33 points or 0.38% as 24 of its components posted losses. Broader NSE Nifty dropped by 48.35 points or 0.43% to close at 11,126.40.

Ahead of scheduled high level trade talks between the U.S. and Chinese officials on October 10, Washington announced restrictions on 28 Chinese entities over human rights violations. The fresh developments weighed heavily on investors’ sentiments globally. In addition, the International Monetary Fund has forecasted the weakest growth in a decade following tariff disputes.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) remained net sellers in equities, offloaded shares worth ₹494.21 crore on a net basis on Monday, according to provisional exchange data. On Friday, FPIs had sold equities worth ₹682.93 crore on net basis. The rupee, meanwhile, depreciated by 9 paise to 71.11 against the U.S. Dollar in early session.

Elsewhere in Asia, bourses in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Tokyo were trading lower, while those in Seoul were trading in the green. Shares on Wall Street ended lower on Tuesday. Brent futures, the global oil benchmark, fell 0.33% to $58.05 per barrel.

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