The Sensex ended lower on unfavourable cues.
Markets end in the red, midcaps in focus
Sensex closed over 118 points down on Thursday.
Experts feel select companies in banking, automobiles, financial services & real estate will gain from lower interest rates
Financials are the top gainers along with index heavyweights.
The 30-share Sensex ended higher by 177.46 points at 28,885.21 and the Nifty gained 63.90 points at 8,778.30.
The 30-share Sensex ended up 12 points at 28,517 while the 50-share Nifty ended nearly unchanged at 8,660.
The 30-share Sensex lost 54 points at end at 27,086 and 50-share Nifty shed 19 points to close at 8,096.
The Sensex ended above 27,000 for the first time while the Nifty topped 8,100.
The benchmark Nifty rallied 1,000 points or 17% from 7,000 in 78 trading sessions since May 12, till date to surpass the 8,000 mark.
ICICI Bank, SBI, Axis Bank and HDFC Bank dipped between 1-2% each.
Nifty, which has struggled around 8550-8560 levels managed to blast past this resistance and close above the psychological mark of 8600.
The government is scheduled to release index of industrial growth for November and consumer price inflation for December later today.
Broad-based buying aided sentiment and the market registers record turnover at Rs 6.86 lakh crore
The 30-share Sensex and the 50-share Nifty ended flat at the mark of 27,403 and 8,248 respectively.
BHEL down around 2.4% and Bharti Airtel down around 1.6% were other major losers.
According to Merrill Lynch (BofA-ML) report, Domestic capital markets are likely to remain volatile in the September-November period due to factors like US Fed's policy action, second quarter corporate earnings and Bihar state elections.
The Indian rupee also trimmed most of its early gains and was trading at Rs 61.28 compared to its Wednesday's close of Rs 61.31 to the US dollar.
Market ended lower for the third straight session led by IT stocks amid downgrade by Citigroup.
Markets rebound with financials leading the gains on hopes of a peaceful solution to the turmoil in Ukraine
TCS, ICICI Bank, Sun Pharma,Tata Motors and HDFC among the top losers for the day
Markets ended tad lower with financials declining the most ahead of RBI policy review tomorrow.
The 30-share Sensex ended down 208 points at 27,057 and the 50-share Nifty closed 59 points lower at 8,094.
Sensex firm on favourable GDP numbers for FY16.
The 30-share Sensex ended 117 points higher at 26,560 and the 50-share Nifty gained 31 points to end at 7,936.
Select metal stocks rebounded while power stocks extended losses after SC verdict on coal block allocations.
The WPI inflation stood at negative 2.4% in May 2015, compared with a negative 2.65% in April 2015.
Markets ended at record closing highs for the second day in a row on institutional buying.
The broader markets underperformed benchmark indices as the BSE Mid-cap and Small-cap tumbled over 2%.
The 30-share Sensex ended up 292 points at 29,571 and the 50-share Nifty closed up 75 points at 8,910.
Markets ended lower following expiry of July F&O contracts and sales by foreign funds.
Sensex gained over 100 points and ended at 26147.33 while the Nifty ended 27 points higher at 7,795.75.
Sensex, Nifty end the day in red on unfavourable cues from global markets.
Sensex ended up 11 points at 25,561 and the 50-share Nifty gained 16 points to end at 7,640.
BSE Sensex ended at 25,549.72 up by 321 points or 1.27% and the Nifty ended 7624.40 up by 97.75 points or 1.30%.
Markets surged in late trades to snap five-day losing streak led by bank shares.
BSE Midcap and Smallcap indices ended in line with their larger counterparts and closed marginally up 0.2% and 0.4%, each
Nifty ends above 8,400; TCS, HDFC surge 2%, Bajaj Auto dips 2%.
The broader markets also ended lower in line with the benchmark indices
The Sensex was up 70 points and the Nifty was up 20 points led by SBI on robust Q2 earnings.