The mood in the market is optimistic after a firm early morning session, with most of the stocks continue to add gains on sustained buying support. Though cement stocks are still subdued, the Sensex has moved up 54 points to 4,689.
Rahi Sarnobat beat all expectations to become India's first woman shooter with an Asian Games gold and the low-profile wushu players delivered their best ever performance even in defeat on another high-yielding day for the country at the regional showpiece.
The Sensex commenced on a positive note with a gain of 11 points at 4,393.
The Sensex shed 41 points to close at 5,677. The Nifty was down 24 points at 1,784.
Nifty PSU bank index dropped nearly 2%
Alstom Power has informed that there is no offloading of shares by ALSTOM Power NV as stated in the said article.\n\n\n\n
Slowdown persists in China. India's GDP estimates for 2015-16 are liable to be pared; projections for 2016-17 are lacklustre.
The Sensex opened with a positive gap of 16 points at 5,281. It slipped a bit to touch an intra-day low of 5,278, bit however soon spurted to an intra-day high of 5,290
The Sensex, which opened with a huge negative gap of 42 points at 3,842, bounced into positive zone immediately on buying in old economy stocks.
HDFC Bank managing director Aditya Puri, ICICI Bank MD and CEO Chanda Kochhar, and Axis Bank MD and CEO Shikha Sharma did not receive their bonuses in full for financial year 2016-17
The Sensex is holding on to its gains on steady gains in techs, PSUs and heavyweights, and is now up 32 points
Nifty saw the biggest weekly gain since the first week of September and comfortably maintained its crucial 8250 levels in today's session
Tracking the strong momentum in the broader market, as many as 99 stocks touched their one-year high level on the BSE on Monday.
The 30-share Sensex ended down 159 points at 27,425 and the 50-share Nifty closed down 24 points at 8,299.
Foreign funds sold Indian shares worth 446.9 million rupees ($7.4 million) on Wednesday, provisional exchange data showed, marking the third consecutive session of outflows.
Assets that are on the block include loans, proprietary bond and equity investments.
The Nifty also ended in the red at 1,838 - down 15 points.
The Sensex opened with a loss of eight points at 5,357, and slipped further to touch a low of 5,352 on lacklustre trading in select stocks.
The Nifty added eight points to close at 1,725.
It is a non-deal roadshow that begins amid threat of workers strike against divestment move
The breadth, indicating the overall health of the market, turned negative from positive
To cut interest rates, the central bank head has to open up a debate on inflation target revision.
In the broader market, the BSE Midcap index bucked the trend to gain 0.3%
The markets opened on firm buying support with a gain of 13 points at 5,199, and crossed the 5,200 mark to touch a high of 5,206.
IndusInd Bank was down nearly 1% even after it reported a 21% rise in its fourth-quarter profit
The judgment stated that there cannot be "any distrust about the responsibilities" the Chief Justice discharges.
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.
Gold prices extended losses for the fourth straight day by losing Rs 325 to Rs 31,100 per ten grams on stockists selling.
The Sensex closed with a loss of four points at 3,889.
Forex dealers said increased selling of the American currency by exporters and banks supported the rupee but a lower opening of the domestic equity market and dollar's rise against other currencies overseas restricted the gains.
The Sensex opened a tad higher at 5,073 - up six points, and is now at 5,081 - up 14 points.
After slipping to a new low of 5,112, the Sensex is now at 5,116, up 14 points. The Nifty is up 8 points at 1,607.
Production cost in Africa varies between $1 and $2 a kg while in Assam it is $1.9 and in West Bengal over $2
A decade on from their last driver's title, courtesy of Kimi Raikkonen in 2007, Ferrari emerged from eight days of testing in Spain with the fastest lap times coupled with impressive reliability.
Banks are clear that lending rates are not going to fall further, say Hamsini Karthik and Anup Roy.