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Friday, February 23, 2007

Black Friday at Dalal Street


Ahead of the budget next week, for the fourth straight day in running, the markets slid without support from any major quarter. It was a free fall in most counters on the back of sustained selling pressure.

Sensex nosedived below 13,600 and Nifty slipped to 3950 mark in intra-day trade. All the BSE sector indices closed in the red. Cement, pharma and banking stocks were the worst hit.

Most market analysts attributed this fall to pre-budget jitters, inflation concerns, stretched valuations, rising interest rates and profit booking across the bourses and equities. UPA Government’s assurance that more steps would be taken to tackle inflation and price rise had no positive impact on the markets.

President’s address to both houses of parliament has hinted at Finance Minister P.Chidambaram announcing these measures in the union budget later next week.

Sensex finally closed 388.78 points below at 13,632.53. It had opened firm, at 14,071.27 but began its southward journey immediately thereafter. The benchmark index kept on touching one low after another, 13, 568.08 being the last one.

The S&P CNX Nifty lost 101.05 points to 3,938.95. The total turnover on BSE amounted to Rs 4039 crore.

The market-breadth, which reflects the overall health of the broader market, was very weak. There were 5.4 losers for every gainer on BSE. A host of stocks from the small-cap and mid-cap space were being heavily sold. Against 2,207 shares declining on BSE, just 411 advanced. Only 36 scrips remained unchanged.

Among the 30-Sensex pack, only 1 advanced while the rest declined. In NSE, there were 102 advances and 944 declines.

Among the sectoral indices, banking stocks plunged 3.42 per cent, FMCG stocks plunged 3.35 per cent, telecom stocks fell 3.22 per cent and pharma stocks were down 2.65 per cent.

The major market movers on NSE were Gail which gained 1.80 per cent to Rs 277; Tata Steel rose 0.95 per cent to Rs 459, Suzlon Energy advanced 0.75 per cent to Rs 1,048, Reliance rose 0.53 per cent to Rs 1,419.50 and GSK Pharma rose 0.53 per cent to Rs 1,165.

The major NSE losers were Oriental Bank which declined 7.10 per cent to Rs 199; Jet Airways fell 6.38 per cent to Rs 639; Bharti Airtel was down 6.34 per cent to Rs 750; Grasim fell 5.99 per cent to Rs 2,276 and ITC fell 4.96 per cent to Rs 165.80.

Atlanta Ltd plunged 10 per cent to Rs 972.70 after Sebi barred the founders and some other investors from trading in shares of the company on charges of unfair trade practices.

Bombay Rayon Fashions Ltd fell 5 per cent to Rs 192.50 after its board approved acquiring 70 per cent stake in UK-based DPJ Clothing Ltd for 1.54 million pound sterling.

Sterlite Optical Technologies declined 6.1 per cent to Rs 177.90 after receiving contracts for INR 1.5 billion from Power Grid Corporation of India.

Power Finance Corporation moved higher and was trading at Rs 113.10 on BSE, a premium over the IPO price of Rs 85. The stock debuted at Rs 104; hit a low of Rs 103.50, and a high of Rs 117. Volumes in the stock were huge, at 2.67 crore shares.

The wholesale price index rose 6.63 per cent in the 12 months to 10 February, lower than the previous week's annual increase of 6.73 per cent due to a fall in some food and textile prices, data showed on Friday (23 February).

As per provisional data, FIIs were net sellers to the tune of Rs 435 crore on Thursday (22 February 2007), the day when the Sensex lost 167 points. FIIs were net sellers to the tune of Rs 348 crore in index-based futures on the same day. They were net sellers to the tune of Rs 104 crore in individual stock futures. Nifty March futures settled at 4066.65 on Thursday, a premium of 26.65 points over the spot Nifty closing of 4,040.

Revised market lots in NSE's derivatives segment become applicable today. The lot size of the Nifty contract has been cut to 50 from 100. This may boost volumes in the derivatives segment.

US blue-chip stocks declined on Thursday, as a jump in oil prices added to worries about inflation, but a rally in chipmakers' stocks helped the Nasdaq advance late in the session to end at a six-year high.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 52.39 points or 0.41 per cent, to end at 12,686.02, with only eight of the 30 stocks in the Dow finishing higher. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index dipped 1.25 points or 0.09 per cent, to finish at 1,456.38. The Nasdaq Composite Index rose 6.52 points or 0.26 per cent, to 2,524.94, its highest close since 15 February 2001. Earlier, the Nasdaq hit a six-year intraday high at 2, 531.42.

US crude shed 9 cents to 60.86 a barrel after jumping 88 cents overnight to its highest level since 2 January 2007.