Markets recovered in late trades, amid firm European cues, led by rebound in financials and gains in IT shares.
Investors booked profits at higher levels with oil shares leading the decline
Sensex falls at close; metals, banks perform well.
Dream rally: Investors' wealth doubled in 5 years in India's equity market on Friday.
Markets surged in late trades to snap five-day losing streak led by bank shares.
Market breadth was weak with 1,260 advances and 1,597 losers on the BSE.
The broader markets ended mixed with mid-caps gaining 0.1 per cent and small-caps falling 0.1 per cent on the BSE.
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.
The 30-share Sensex ended up 8 points at 27,508 and the 50-share Nifty closed 1 point higher at 8,284.
Participants are eyeing the Bihar elections.
Investors booked profit ahead of the outcome of the two-day US Fed policy meet which begins today.
HDFC, TCS, RIL, ITC and ICICI Bank dragged the Sensex by over 100 points.
The government will release the Index of Industrial Production for July 2015 on Friday, September 11, 2015.
The market breadth in BSE remains positive with 1,554 shares advancing and 1,196 shares declining.
Asian shares ended higher after a string of positive US economic data.
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 catapults 1,241 points and Nifty vaults 382 points in two sessions in a row.
Telecom shares rallied on hopes that they would hike tariffs after huge investments to acquire spectrum.
The 30-share Sensex ended 53 points higher at 28,439 and the 50-share Nifty closed 18 points higher at 8,494.
India Inc did not perform well during December quarter.
The broader markets are outperforming the benchmark indices.
T N Ninan lists a few David-Goliath encounters in the Indian markets, all of which make life interesting, though difficult if you are an investor looking for the next multi-bagger.
Markets snapped two-day losing streak and ended flat with a positive bias on Tuesday as gains in auto shares helped offset losses in IT majors.
Market breadth ended weak on the BSE with 1,838 declines against 1,218 advances.
TCS, ICICI Bank, Sun Pharma,Tata Motors and HDFC among the top losers for the day
The broader markets were marginally higher with mid-caps and small-caps gaining 0.1-0.4 per cent on the BSE.
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.
The broader markets underperformed benchmark indices as the BSE Mid-cap and Small-cap tumbled over 2%.
Markets ended lower following expiry of July F&O contracts and sales by foreign funds.
BSE Healthcare, Oil & Gas, Consumer Durable, TECk, Power and Metal indices declined between 0.5-1%.
The global economy may just be entering a new phase.
IT companies account for a third of the entire dividend pot this year
The upbeat earnings from Reliance Industries will set the tone for the truncated week ahead
The Sensex ended below 28,000 for the second straight day at 27,869.
Meanwhile, IT index continues to be the top loser down 3.8%. Financial stocks witnessed renewed buying interest at lower levels.
Sensex gained nearly 0.4% or 96 points at 26087 level while Nifty ended up by 42 points or 0.5% at 7,791.40 level.
Govt rules out controls on FII capital as Sensex tanks 3.97%, rupee breaches 62 intra-day & gold surges the most in two years
Sensex ended above 26,000 led by telecom shares amid TRAI's spectrum sharing norms.
In an hour-long chat on rediff.com on Thursday, A K Prabhakar, senior VP and Head -- Equity Research (Retail), Anand Rathi Financial Services Ltd, discussed the best stocks to put the investors' money in.
Brokers like Vasudevan are struggling to keep themselves in tune with this super-informed, new-generation retail investor.