S&P BSE Sensex settled at 31,170, up 60 points, while the broader Nifty50 closed at record high for third straight session. It ended at 9,624, up 19 points.
The 30-share S&P BSE Sensex ended up 130 points at 25,400 and the Nifty50 rose 46 points to close at 7,759.
Markets ended in red; index heavyweight under pressure.
TCS, Bajaj Auto, Adani Ports and Cipla were the top gainers on BSE Sensex while Coal India, GAIL, Dr Reddy's and Infosys lost the most on the index.
S&P BSE Midcap index and S&P BSE Smallcap were down 2% and 1.3% respectively
Markets ended in red, index heavyweights drag.
Nifty is likely to remain under selling pressure unless and until it breach the 7,700-7,720 levels on closing basis.
Asian stocks sagged on Monday, with risk sentiment dampened as Shanghai shares wobbled after the Chinese markets resumed trading following a four-day long weekend.
Markets in countries whose economic fortunes were closely linked to China's growth tumbled.
Japan's Nikkei fell 0.5% and South Korea's Kospi lost 1.3%.
The regional fallout could continue.
Experts suggest domestic factors rather than the Greece crisis would determine the course of the Indian equities.
Expectations of continued stimulus withdrawal by the US Federal Reserve added to the market's gloom.
The Sensex closed higher by 170 points at 26,128 and the Nifty rose 59 points to end at 7,943.
Decline in the rupee coupled with a slide in the crude oil prices have dented the sentiments.
The FMCG index gained more than 1% on the back of stellar gains in ITC.
Sensex seems to be under pressure on weak cues.
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.
Metals, auto and banking shares were in the limelight in this session; the FMCG pack, however, ended lower.
Custodian banks are selling dollars for their foreign fund clients.
The Sensex ended at at 27,676, lower by 210 points and the Nifty broke the psychological level of 8,400 to end at 83877 down 70 points.
Sensex ended strong, Tata Steel, HUL climb higher.
Five of the 12 BSE sectoral indices ended at 52-week highs; the oil and gas index zoomed by nearly 5%.
Investor sentiment got a boost following remarks from the Russian President Putin that allayed fears of an imminent military conflict in Ukraine
Sensex in green, JSW climbs higher.
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.