A person looks up at a screen and an electronic ticker board outside the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) building in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
5 years ago
May 11, 2021
Godrej Consumer, KEC, Siemens, Firstsource are the companies scheduled to report earnings Tuesday. Foreign investors sold net Rs 1,200 crore of stocks on May 7, according to the NSDL website.
India stocks snapped a four-session winning streak, tracking peers across Asia, on concerns that higher inflation in the U.S. may push up interest rates, which could slow dollar-flows into emerging markets.
The S&P BSE Sensex dropped 0.7% to 49,161.81, while the NSE Nifty 50 Index declined 0.6% to 14,850.75. Housing Development Finance Corp. contributed the most to the index decline, decreasing 2.7%. JSW Steel Ltd. had the largest drop, falling 3.2%.
The broader market outperformed their larger peers with the S&P BSE MidCap gaining 0.6% and S&P BSE SmallCap climbing 0.8% at the close.
Ten of the 19 sector sub-indices compiled by BSE Ltd. advanced, led by a gauge of utilities. The S&P BSE Metal saw some profit-booking after the index hit a record on Monday.
Indian oil refiners advance after news agency The Press Trust of India reported companies have raised prices of petrol and diesel for a sixth time in recent weeks, citing price notifications by state-owned fuel retailers.
Companies have also been better-off this year despite the deadly virus wave due to additional storage facilities for surplus, absence of a nationwide lockdown and reopening of parts of Europe providing a potential outlet for excess supplies
Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals rises as much as 9.1% to its highest since Jan. 2020; Indian Oil Corp. 5.3%, Hindustan Petroleum Corp. 4.5% while Bharat Petroleum Corp. 2.2%
S&P BSE Oil and Gas Index climbs as much as 2.1% to its highest level in nearly two months.
Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd. rose 13% after a bunch of large trades.
The company had 14.2 million shares change hands in five large trades, according to Bloomberg data.
Trading in the company's put options totalled 12,788 contracts, compared with the average of 1,980 over the past 20 days. Trading in the company's call options totalled 28,174 contracts, compared with the average of 6,672 over the same period.
The relative strength index on the stock was above 70, indicating it may be overbought.
Analysts have three buy, nine hold, and 19 sell recommendations on the stock.
The price target of Rs 31.41 represents a 58% decrease from the last price
The Indian rupee declined for the first day in four along with equities as stricter lockdowns by states to curb the spread of coronavirus weighed on sentiment. Sovereign bonds trade steady.
USD/INR rises 0.2% to 73.47 after climbing 0.3% earlier, the most since May 3
RBI was the only buyer of the pair Monday and did not allow an appreciation beyond 73.30 for the rupee
Medi Assist Healthcare Services Ltd., a provider of third-party insurance services, plans to sell up to 28 million shares in an initial public offering, according to a document available on issue manager Edelweiss Financial’s website.
The IPO will involve an offer for the sale of shares by founders and investors in the company
Founder Vikram Jit Singh Chhatwal offers to sell 2.5 million shares, Medimatter Health Management Pvt. offers 12.5 million shares in the sale; Bessemer Health Capital LLC’s 6.6 million shares and 6.1 million shares by Investcorp Private Equity Fund to also be part of IPO
Axis Capital Ltd., Edelweiss Financial Services Ltd., IIFL Securities Ltd. and SBI Capital Markets Ltd. are managing the issue
Private equity firm Bay Tree India Holdings has sold a 2.1% stake in India’s Yes Bank, reducing its holding by almost a third.
Bay Tree cut its stake in the embattled lender that was the centre of India’s largest financial bailout last year, it said in a statement on Tuesday. It now holds a 5.4% stake after multiple sales in the open market between Jan. 6 to May 6.