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.
Custodian banks are selling dollars for their foreign fund clients.
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.
Capital goods, IT, auto and pharmaceuticals lead gains for the financial year
The good news is that within the first 14 months, orders for manufacturing and commissioning of the entire 88,537 Mw capacity for the 12th Plan have been placed, according to the Central Electricity Authority, the country's apex power planning body.
Market ended lower for the third straight session led by IT stocks amid downgrade by Citigroup.
Markets could slide again owing to conditions in Europe and the US.
The 30-share Sensex ended down 208 points at 27,057 and the 50-share Nifty closed 59 points lower at 8,094.
The WPI inflation stood at negative 2.4% in May 2015, compared with a negative 2.65% in April 2015.
The 30-share Sensex ended 117 points higher at 26,560 and the 50-share Nifty gained 31 points to end at 7,936.
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.
Power Minister Piyush Goyal on the government's manufacturing push and other key issues.
The 30-share Sensex is up 253 points at 29,263 and the 50-share Nifty has gained 68 points at 8,829.
The 30-share Sensex jumped 729 points to end at 28,076 and the 50-share Nifty soared 217 points to end at 8,494.
Markets were left high and dry last week, as the 'Monsoon Effect' played havoc on trader sentiment.
Market breadth was weak with 1,260 advances and 1,597 losers on the BSE.
Sensex ended up 11 points at 25,561 and the 50-share Nifty gained 16 points to end at 7,640.
Markets surged in late trades to snap five-day losing streak led by bank shares.
ONGC, Sesa Sterlite, Tata Steel, RIL and HDFC emerged as the biggest losers
Nifty ends above 8,400; TCS, HDFC surge 2%, Bajaj Auto dips 2%.
Global brokerage firm CLSA is positive on India's growth stroy.
The amount is around a fifth of the cumulative investment in fixed assets by these companies.
BSE Midcap and Smallcap indices ended in line with their larger counterparts and closed marginally up 0.2% and 0.4%, each
Reliance Industries and ONGC were down 4-6% each contributing the most to the Sensex losses
Sensex plunges 322.39 points to over 1-month closing low of 27,797.01; Nifty tumbles 97.55 points to 8,340.70.
Weak GDP data and unfaouvrable global data has pulled down Sensex, Nifty.
The Sensex was up 70 points and the Nifty was up 20 points led by SBI on robust Q2 earnings.
Rate sensitive sectors rallied the most led by banks while metals surged on rebound in commodity prices
The Sensex ended below 28,000 for the second straight day at 27,869.
The broader markets were marginally higher with mid-caps and small-caps gaining 0.1-0.4 per cent on the BSE.
The 30-share Sensex ended 50 points lower at 28,112 and the 50-share Nifty declined 12 points to close at 8,531.
ITC, Infosys, Wipro and HDFC Bank among the major losers.
The 30-share Sensex is down 359 points at 26,378 and the Nifty has dropped 78 points to trade at 7,883
After 3 weeks of consecutive rally, this week was a breather for the index, which corrected by almost 1.5%.
Pharma major Lupin and mortgage lender HDFC were the top losers.
The 30-share Sensex closed at 27,112 up by 481 points whereas the Nifty ended higher by 139 points at 8,115.
The Sensex ended 290 points higher at 29,095 mark and the Nifty gained 94 points to close at 8,806 levels.
Benchmark share indices ended lower on profit taking after they touched record highs in the previous session.