Look at reaping the first-mover advantage by possessing lands in AP's newly-announced capital city.
ONGC was the top gainer which surged over 4% followed by Axis, SBI, CIL
The S&P BSE Sensex ended 46 points lower at 24,824 and Nifty50 settled at 7,555, down by 8 points after hitting intra-day high of 7,600.45.
BSE Midcap index outperformed the benchmark indices to end with 0.4% gains.
But he is actively pursuing greenfield steel plants in Karnataka and Jharkhand; ultimately, only one of these might come up.
Market ended lower for the third straight session led by IT stocks amid downgrade by Citigroup.
The companies' underrecoveries stood at a whopping Rs 1,39,869 crore last financial year. Of that, Rs 62,837 crore was accounted for by diesel alone.
The WPI inflation stood at negative 2.4% in May 2015, compared with a negative 2.65% in April 2015.
Oil firms' borrowings could fall by up to Rs 15,000 cr, govt's subsidy bill by 12% .
The broader markets, however, outperformed their larger peers.
Markets ended at record closing highs for the second day in a row on institutional buying.
Lowering excise duty on petrol, diesel, and other fuels, branded fuels.
Reliance Industries and ONGC were down 4-6% each contributing the most to the Sensex losses
The broader markets also ended lower in line with the benchmark indices
Five of the 12 BSE sectoral indices ended at 52-week highs; the oil and gas index zoomed by nearly 5%.
BSE Realty index zoomed by almost 7% followed by counters like Metal, Oil & Gas, Auto, Banks, Auto, Healthcare and Power, all surging between 1-5%.
More and more corporates are appreciating Mahatma Gandhi's books as gifts.
On the last day of FY!5, the Sensex ended lower by 18.37 points at 27,957.49.
Sensex in green, JSW climbs higher.
Describing DBT for LPG as a 'tremendous success,' Oil Minister M Veerappa Moily said the programme, when implemented throughout the country, would help save Rs 8,000-9,000 crore (Rs 80-90 billion) of subsidy from going to unintended beneficiaries.
Markets will remain closed on Thursday, 12 November 2015 on account of Diwali Balipratipada.
Sensex in green in afternoon trade.
M-cap of 35% of BSE-500 companies, excluding financial ones, is below their debt or just a shade above
The 30-share Sensex closed down 115 points at 28,444 and the 50-share Nifty ended down 31 points at 8,524.
Markets extended losses to end 1.5% down on Tuesday, amid weak global cues, after investors turned cautious ahead of key economic data and booked profits in rate sensitive shares while the further fall in the rupee continued to weigh on investor sent.
Sensex witnessed the biggest single day gain since May 2009 in absolute terms.
Custom duties, a major concern for the oil sector.
Analysts say Tatas could sustain their current pace of growth, provided the group's "cash cows", such as TCS and Tata Motors, continue to deliver.
IT and pharma companies again save the day; mask pain in domestic consumption.
Although the current long-term bullish trend is intact, markets are awaiting clarity on the taper and the Assembly election results.
Re-instatement of 5% custom duty on crude imports will help.
Investors cheered a sharp decline in the Current Account Deficit, which stands at a 4 year low as exports picked up and gold imports reduced.
Q1 results indicate more pain ahead, as slowdown has spread to more sectors, pricing power has come down and rising interest cost is eating into profits.