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Nifty below 8,150; Maruti Suzuki slips nearly 3%

Last updated on: June 16, 2016 17:34 IST

Stock traders

 

Key benchmark indices extended decline to hit fresh intraday low in mid-morning trade.

At 2:50 PM, the barometer index, the S&P BSE Sensex was down 214 points at 26,512.

The Nifty 50 index was currently down 69 points at 8,137.

Weakness in Asian stocks after the Bank of Japan and the US Federal Reserve deciding to keep interest rates on hold weighed on domestic bourses.

The Sensex lost 378 points or 1.41% at the day's low of 26,348.34 in mid-morning trade, its lowest level since 14 June 2016.

The index fell 40.31 points or 0.15% at the day's high of 26,686.03 in early trade.

The Nifty lost 122.20 points or 1.48% at the day's low of 8,084.40, its lowest level since 14 June 2016.

The index fell 25.95 points or 0.31% at the day's high of 8,180.65 in early trade.

In overseas markets, Asian stocks dropped as investors digested the US Federal Reserve's decision to keep interest rates on hold.

In Japan, the Nikkei 225 index was currently down 3.17% after the Bank of Japan (BoJ) kept monetary policy steady as was widely expected.

BSE graphAt the end of a two-day monetary policy review, the BoJ said it will continue to conduct money market operations so the monetary base increases at an annual pace of 80 trillion yen ($760 billion) and maintain a negative interest rate of minus 0.1% to the policy-rate balances in current accounts held by financial institutions at the bank.

In mainland China, the Shanghai Composite index was currently off 0.32%.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index was currently down 1.97%. US stocks ended lower yesterday, marking a fifth session of losses, after the US Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged and backed off an aggressive stance on future rate hikes.

Closer home, the broad market depicted weakness. There were more than two losers for every gainer on BSE.

1,551 shares declined and 643 shares rose. A total of 123 shares were unchanged. The BSE Mid-Cap index was currently off 0.58%.

The BSE Small-Cap index was currently off 0.84%. The fall in both these indices was lower than the Sensex's decline in percentage terms.

Bank stocks declined.

Among private bank stocks, HDFC Bank (down 0.6%), Kotak Mahindra Bank (down 1.74%), ICICI Bank (down 3.06%), Axis Bank (down 1.28%), IndusInd Bank (down 1.92%) and Yes Bank (down 1.51%) declined.

Among PSU bank stocks, UCO Bank (down 1.33%), Syndicate Bank (down 1.03%), Bank of Baroda (down 0.76%), IDBI Bank (down 1.77%), Bank of India (down 0.55%) and Union Bank of India (down 1.09%) dropped.

Indian Bank (up 2.36%), Vijaya Bank (up 1.96%), Punjab National Bank (up 0.66%) and Canara Bank (up 0.93%) rose.

Shares of associate banks of SBI surged, extending gains registered during the previous trading session triggered by media reports that the government has given its go ahead for merger of 5 associate banks with SBI.

State Bank of Mysore (up 17.36%), State Bank of Travancore (up 13.32%) and State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur (up 13.74%) surged. All these three stock rose by their respective 20% maximum permissible daily level yesterday.

The stock price of parent State Bank of India (SBI) was currently down 0.05% at Rs 215.55. The stock surged 3.9% to settle at Rs 215.65 yesterday.

On 17 May 2016, SBI had announced that it was seeking in principle sanction of the Government of India (GoI) to enter into negotiation with its 5 subsidiary banks viz. State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur, State Bank of Hyderabad, State Bank of Mysore, State Bank of Patiala and State Bank of Travancore to acquire their businesses including assets and liabilities. At that time SBI also said that its board of directors will take a final call after evaluating all the relevant considerations.

SBI also said at that time that it was considering acquisition of the newly-created Bharatiya Mahila Bank.

SBI holds 90% stake in State Bank of Mysore, 79.09% stake in State Bank of Travancore and 75.07% stake in State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur. State Bank of Hyderabad and State Bank of Patiala are not listed on the bourses.

On the macro front, India's merchandise exports fell 0.79% at $22.17 billion in May 2016 over May 2015. Non-petroleum exports rose 1.01% at $20.19 billion in May 2016 over May 2015.

Imports fell 13.16% at $28.44 billion in May 2016 over May 2015.

Oil imports fell 30.45% at $5.93 billion. Non-oil imports fell 7.06% at $22.50 billion. The trade deficit fell to $6.27 billion in May 2016 from $10.41 billion in May 2015.

The commerce ministry released the trade data on provisional basis for May 2016 after trading hours yesterday.

Image: Stock traders at work. Photograph: Reuters

SI Reporter in Mumbai
Source: source image