Stocks trip on Turkish turmoil, plunging rupee

August 16, 2018 06:03 pm | Updated 06:03 pm IST - Mumbai

Benchmarks spiralled lower on Thursday as a plunging rupee and Turkey’s financial crisis sparked a retreat from equities, while lacklustre macro data further sapped investor confidence.

The BSE Sensex tumbled over 188 points to close at 37,663.56, while the broader NSE Nifty shed 50.05 points to crack below the 11,400-mark.

The rupee slumped to an all-time low of 70.40 per dollar (intra-day) on persistent foreign fund outflows.

Weak leads from other Asian bourses following Turkey’s currency crisis and fears of an economic slowdown in China affected sentiment on Dalal Street, brokers said.

Trading momentum was further impacted as the country’s trade deficit soared to a near five-year high of USD 18 billion in July, as per official data released after market hours on Tuesday.

After opening lower at 37,796.01, the 30-share Sensex slipped further to touch a low of 37,634.43, but a rally in Infosys, Sun Pharma and Tata Motors lent a helping hand.

The index finally settled at 37,663.56, down 188.44 points, or 0.50%.

Markets were shut on Wednesday on account of Independence Day.

The NSE Nifty traded in the red for the major part of the session and cracked below the 11,400-mark to hit a low of 11,366.25.

It later recovered a bit to finish at 11,385.05, showing a loss of 50.05 points, or 0.44%.

Meanwhile, foreign institutional investors (FIIs) offloaded shares worth a net of ₹378.84 crore, while domestic institutional investors (DIIs) bought shares worth ₹391.47 crore on Tuesday, provisional data showed.

“Market slid as depreciation in rupee on account of widening trade gap impacted investors sentiment. Additionally, domestic yield surged due to concern on inflation and weakness in INR.

“Moderation in oil price and expectation of reversal in FII inflow due to pick up in earnings will cap downside. On the sectorial front, metal and PSU bank under-performed while IT and pharma gained owing to deprecation in INR,” said Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Financial Services.

Kotak Bank was the hardest hit in the Sensex pack, plunging 3.62%, after the RBI on Tuesday said the recent stake dilution by the bank’s founder Uday Kotak does not meet its regulatory norms.

Yes Bank, HDFC Bank, IndusInd Bank and SBI were also under pressure, falling by up to 0.80%, mainly due to profit-booking.

Losses were also reported by Vedanta (3.05%), HDFC Ltd (2.61%), Tata Steel (1.87%), L&T (1.64%), Wipro (1.60%), ONGC (1.35%) Adani Ports (0.91%), RIL (0.89%), HUL (0.58%) and M&M (0.30%).

Gains of 2.98% were seen in Sun Pharma after the company received approval from the US health regulator for an eye medicine.

Bharti Airtel, Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, Tata Motors, Hero MotoCorp, Maruti Suzuki, NTPC, Bajaj Auto, TCS, Coal India, ITC Ltd and PowerGrid also finished with gains.

IT stocks such as Infosys and TCS gained up to 1.17% mainly due to a weak rupee, which boosted the dollar earnings outlook of software exporters.

In sectoral terms, the BSE metal index emerged as the worst performer, diving 2.18%, followed by capital goods 1.05%, consumer durables 0.96%, finance 0.93%, energy 0.86%, bankex 0.64%, oil and gas 0.48%, realty 0.48%, PSU 0.29% and infrastructure 0.24%.

Healthcare, IT, teck and auto indices closed in the positive terrain.

Broader markets too were under pressure. The BSE mid-cap index fell 0.48 % and the small-cap index lost 0.20 %.

Elsewhere in Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng shed 0.99%, while Shanghai Composite Index too was down 0.63%. Japan’s Nikkei slipped 0.05%.

Coming to European markets, Frankfurt’s DAX was up 0.13%, while Paris CAC rose 0.21% in early deals. London’s FTSE edged higher by 0.21%.

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