Sensex rises over 100 points on firm rupee, falling crude prices

Updated - November 22, 2018 10:18 am IST

Published - November 22, 2018 10:16 am IST - Mumbai

A man ties a balloon to the horns of a bull statue at the entrance of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) while celebrating the Sensex index rising to over 30,000, in Mumbai, India April 26, 2017. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade

A man ties a balloon to the horns of a bull statue at the entrance of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) while celebrating the Sensex index rising to over 30,000, in Mumbai, India April 26, 2017. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade

The benchmark BSE Sensex recovered over 100 points in early trade on fresh gains in bluechips like Infosys, RIL, TCS and HDFC amid rising rupee and easing crude prices.

The 30-share index bounced by 134.93 points, or 0.38% to 35,334.73, with sectoral indices led by IT, teck, FMCG and oil and gas stocks advancing up to 1.15%.

The barometer had lost over 575 points in the previous two sessions.

Also, the NSE Nifty was up 36.75 points, or 0.36%, at 10,636.80.

Brokers said fresh buying by domestic institutional investors (DIIs) and retailers, coupled with strengthening rupee against the U.S. dollar and falling global crude oil prices, influenced trading sentiments here.

Negative Asian cues, however, capped the gains.

The rupee rose by 35 paise to trade at 71.11 against the dollar in early trade at the interbank forex market Thursday.

Prominent gainers were TCS, Yes Bank, ONGC, Vedanta, Wipro, HDFC, Adani Ports, RIL, IndusInd Bank, L&T, HUL, Tata Motors, ITC and HDFC Bank, rising up to 1.57%.

However, Bharti Airtel emerged worst Sensex performer, falling over 2%, followed by M&M PowerGrid, Tata Steel and SBI.

Meanwhile, domestic institutional investors (DIIs) bought shares worth a net of ₹606.73 crore, while foreign institutional investors (FIIs) sold shares to the tune of ₹1,652.04 crore on Wednesday, provisional data showed.

Elsewhere in Asia, Japan’s Nikkei fell 0.02%, Shanghai Composite Index shed 0.55%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 0.31% and Singapore declined 0.30% in early trade.

The U.S. Dow Jones Industrial Average gave up initial gains to end almost flat on Wednesday.

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