The CSI300 of the leading Shanghai and Shenzhen A-share listings has lost almost 11 per cent this week.
The S&P BSE Sensex ended 80 points up at 23,789 while the Nifty50 closed at 7,235, up 24 points.
Markets ended lower for the third straight day on Tuesday weighed down by profit taking in rate sensitives with bank shares leading the decline after hopes of rate cut by the central bank faded.
Bank shares were the top gainers led by ICICI Bank.
FPIs sold shares worth a net Rs 1236.95 crore on Friday.
Notable losers were ONGC, Axis Bank, ITC, SBI, ICICI Bank, NTPC, Hero Motocorp, Sun Pharma and Bharti Airtel who fell by up to 2.80 per cent.
Indian equity markets registered their highest single-day percentage gains since early October.
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 broader markets ended negatively with mid-caps and small-caps shedding 0.5 per cent on the BSE.
Reliance Industries was the top Sensex gainer up 5.6% after the company reported better-than-expected net profit growth at 12% in the second-quarter aided hby higher gross refining margins.
The broader markets ended firm with mid-caps and small-caps gaining nearly 0.5 per cent on the BSE.
Investors engaged in profit booking in the recent gainers at attractive and higher valuations.
The broader markets were firm with mid-caps and small-caps gaining 1-1.4 per cent on the BSE.
The US FOMC concludes its two-day meeting today while the Bank of Japan will start its two-day meeting today.
Market breadth is positive with 942 advances and 196 declines.
All sectoral indices, led by realty, PSU, oil & gas and banking, were in positive zone with gains of up to 1.25 per cent.
The Sensex soared 402 points higher to end at 25,720 and the Nifty surged 130 points to close at 7,819.
Markets shrugged off RBI's neutral stance on key policy rates.
S&P upgraded India's credit outlook to 'stable' from 'negative' earlier.
Nifty September F&O series ended lower after seven consecutive positive series with Metal Index falling the most
Top gainers from the Sensex pack are Asian Paints, Bajaj Auto, ITC, NTPC, L&T and HDFC, all up 2% each
Market breadth remained strong with 1,581 advances over 1,018 declines on the BSE
Markets in countries whose economic fortunes were closely linked to China's growth tumbled.
Investors booked profit ahead of the outcome of the two-day US Fed policy meet which begins today.
Bank of Baroda ended flat after sharp gains in the previous session.
The broader markets traded positively with mid-caps and small-caps rising 0.5 per cent each on the BSE.
HDFC, TCS, RIL, ITC and ICICI Bank dragged the Sensex by over 100 points.
Most Asian markets were trading weak on Monday.
Sensex ended up 190 points at 25,519 and Nifty climbed 57 points to end at 7,626.
Experts believe that one should not allocate more than 5-10 per cent of one's equity portfolio to international funds.
Capital Goods shares ended mixed on the back of weak IIP numbers. L&T ended down 0.7% while BHEL ended with marginal gains.
Capital goods shares continued to trade firm in late noon despite weak market trend on the back of encouraging core sector growth in February.
The regional fallout could continue.
Experts suggest domestic factors rather than the Greece crisis would determine the course of the Indian equities.
Chances of a sudden collapse in the Shanghai Composite are remote.
The breakdown of talks between Greece and its international creditors raised fears of Greece's exit from the euro zone.
Bank shares were the top losers after sharp gains last week.
Asian shares ended higher after a string of positive US economic data.
Sensex catapults 1,241 points and Nifty vaults 382 points in two sessions in a row.
The Survey shows fiscal consolidation despite slowdown in growth.