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Unabated selling for 4th session

After sluggish opening, indices gain on reports over US-Russia meeting; However, Sensex, Nifty pare mid-session gains as Ukraine crisis simmers amid uncertainty

Markets open on a negative note
X

Markets open on a negative note

Wait And Watch Mode

- BSE Sensex down 149.38 pts to 57,683.59

- NSE Nifty slipped 69.65 pts to 17,206.65

- 21 of Sensex-30 constituents in the red

- Sun Pharma, TCS, ITC, Tech Mahindra, UltraTech Cement and Titan fell

- Wipro, Infosys, PowerGrid, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank and Maruti among gainers

Mumbai: Domestic equity gauges Sensex and Nifty logged their fourth straight session of fall on Monday as participants remained cautious over lingering geopolitical tensions in eastern Europe. Persistent foreign fund outflows added to the gloom, traders said. Tracking deep losses in other Asian bourses, the BSE Sensex dived around 700 points in the opening session, but staged a recovery to briefly trade in the positive zone as market jitters were calmed by hopes of talks between the US and Russia over the Ukraine crisis.

However, Sensex wilted under selling pressure in the afternoon session to settle at 57,683.59, down 149.38 points or 0.26 per cent. Similarly, the broader NSE Nifty slipped 69.65 points or 0.40 per cent to close at 17,206.65.

"Domestic indices started weak, taking cues from negative global peers, but in between recouped most of its losses on reports of likely meeting between Biden and Putin over the Ukraine issue. However, the market could not stretch the direction and turned negative as uncertainty in the global markets continued. Investors stood on the sidelines, impacting volumes. The market is expected to be volatile due to the upcoming Fed meeting and state election results," said Vinod Nair, head of (research) at Geojit Financial Services.

Ajit Mishra, V-P (research), Religare Broking Ltd, adds that "markets are in wait and watch mode in line with global peers and closely monitoring the Russia-Ukraine crisis for cues. Meanwhile, the volatile swings in the index combined with the selling in broader markets are making traders' life difficult. We thus recommend limiting positions and keeping the existing hedged until the markets stabilize."

Continuing their selling spree, foreign institutional investors (FIIs) offloaded shares worth Rs 2,529.96 crore in the Indian capital markets on Friday, exchange data showed.

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