SENSEX
TANKS 465 PTS, NIFTY BELOW 8,600-LEVEL ON SURGICAL STRIKES ACROSS LOC
After Indian Army’s ‘surgical strikes’ on
Wednesday night on terror launch-pads across Line of Control (LoC), the stock
market on both the bourses was hit very badly as the Sensex on Thursday plunged
over 465 points -- the biggest single-day fall in 3 months, while NSE Nifty
cracked below 8,600-level to hit a low of 8,558.25 during the session, and
later managed to recover some ground.
The intra-day trading also saw the BSE benchmark index down with
over 573, but some bargain-buying at lower levels helped the index settle
higher than the day's low of 27,719.92. The rupee too was caught in the
crossfire, sharply down 39 paise against the US dollar, at 66.85.
The stocks went into a panic mode soon after the announcement that
India conducted surgical strikes last night on terror pads across the Line of
Control. However, dynamics of the September derivatives expiry ensured the
spree of liquidation of bets did not lead to a free fall.
Earlier, the Sensex had hit a high of 28,475.57, in sync with a
firm global trend after a surprise decision by OPEC to cut oil output for the
first time in eight years to push up prices. The Army's announcement triggered
all-round selling, sending the 30-share barometer into a tizzy, which went
below the key 28,000-mark.
It settled at 27,827.53, lower by 465.28 points, or 1.64 per cent
-- its biggest single-day fall since June 24 and weakest closing since August
26 when it closed at 27,782.25. The 50-share NSE Nifty, which cracked below
8,600-level to hit a low of 8,558.25 during the session, managed to recover
some ground and ended down 153.90 points, or 1.76 per cent, at 8,591.25.
In a tweet, Economic Affairs Secretary Shaktikanta Das said
'decisive action against terrorism will spur growth and stability'. The mood
turned decidedly cautious after the Army said the surgical offensive last night
came on very specific and credible information about Pakistan-based terrorists
being pushed into Indian territory for carrying out strikes in Jammu and
Kashmir and various cities in India.
The red mark was all over the place as 29 of 30 Sensex stocks
slumped. Adani Ports lost most by 5.01 per cent. Sun Pharma, ICICI Bank, GAIL,
Tata Steel, Lupin, Tata Motors and SBI followed. TCS manged to close in the
green, up 0.46 per cent.
“As markets got first whiff of developments across the border,
panic liquidation gripped the stocks enmasse, resulting in a sell-off across
the board,” said Anand James, Chief Market Strategist, Geojit BNP Paribas
Financial Services. Realty got the maximum battering, falling 6.31 per cent,
followed by power (4.11 per cent), healthcare (3.26 per cent), metal (3.17 per
cent), infrastructure (3.15 per cent) and consumer durables (2.84 per cent).
Broader markets stumbled too, with the BSE small-cap index falling 4.02 per
cent and mid-cap 3.60 per cent.
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) net bought shares worth Rs
73.83 crore on Wednesday, as per provisional data. Much of Asia and Europe
traded in the positive territory. Japan's Nikkei rose 1.39 per cent and Hong
Kong's Hang Seng 0.51 per cent. Shanghai Composite ended 0.36 per cent higher.
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