...
...
Next Story

Mkts fall for 5th day, Sensex tanks 147 pts on weak global cues

Falling for the fifth straight day, Sensex today closed 147.50 points lower at over two-week low of 18,471.37 weighed down by losses in metal and IT stocks amid weak global cues on persistent worries about US fiscal problem.

Updated on: Nov 15, 2012 07:36 PM IST
Advertisement

Falling for the fifth straight day, the BSE benchmark Sensex on Thursday closed 147.50 points lower at over two-week low of 18,471.37 weighed down by losses in metal and IT stocks amid weak global cues on persistent worries about US fiscal problem.

HT Image
HT Image

The Sensex, which had lost 284 points in the last four trading sessions, opened weak and continued to slide lower in line with Asian markets that mirrored a fall in US stocks yesterday on rising concern about the budget debate in the US.

After touching the day's low of 18,408.69, stock markets closed slightly better at 18,471.37 -- still down 147.50 points, or 0.79%, over Tuesday's closing value.

This was the lowest closing for Sensex since 18430.85 on October30.

On similar lines, the National Stock Exchange index lost 35.95 points, or 0.63% to close at 5,631.

Brokers said trading sentiment dampened on weak trend in Asia and lower opening in European markets later.

The IT sector, which gets a substantial share of revenue comes from the US, suffered heavy losses. Infosys, Wipro and TCS fell in 1.9-2.2% range.

Tata Steel, which dropped 2.66%, was the biggest loser in 30-share Sensex. Hindalco and Jindal Steel lost 1.8-2.3%.

Of the 13 BSE sectoral indices, only realty, consumer durables and power logged gains.

Traders said investor confidence was also hit after the luke response to the 2G telecom spectrum auction raised concerns over fiscal deficit.

However, telecom stocks including Bharti Airtel, rose.

Airtel closed with nearly 3% gain after the lower market-discovered prices in the auction cheered investors, said analysts.

 
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe