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Sensex Trades Over 800 Points Lower On Global Rout: 10 Things To Know

S&P BSE Sensex sank as much as 1,037.36 points Markets tanked owing to global rout, said experts All 30 Sensex stocks but one traded in the red

Experts said that the markets tanked owing to global rout.
Experts said that the markets tanked owing to global rout.
  1. Twenty eight out of 30 Sensex stocks and 40 out of 50 Nifty shares were in the negative.
  2. Tata Steel, State Bank of India (SBI), Infosys, Mahindra and Mahindra, and Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) were the top five Sensex losers.
  3. Heavyweights HDFC, Infosys, HDFC Bank, SBI and TCS led the fall in the Sensex.
  4. "The global sell-off had an impact on the domestic markets. There is also a fear of rising interest rates. Macro fundamentals are also bad. All this has hurt the investor sentiment," said AK Prabhakar, Head of Research at IDBI Capital.
  5. On the NSE, all sectoral indices traded with losses. The Nifty PSU Bank ( index of state-run banks) and the Nifty Metal (the index of metal stocks) fell the most losing 4.56 per cent and 4.01  per cent respectively.  
  6. Experts advised traders to remain cautious. "Volatility indecisiveness prevails in the market and not only global but also domestic dynamics are causing doubts in the minds of investors...the investors are advised to remain cautious as volatility may prevail in markets," said Ritesh Ashar, Chief Strategy Officer, KIFS Trade Capital.
  7. According to provisional data available with the National Stock Exchange (NSE), foreign portfolio investors sold net equities worth Rs 1,096.05 crore on Wednesday.
  8. In the currency market, the rupee hit a fresh all-time low of 74.48 against the US dollar strong demand for the greenback and sustained capital outflows.
  9. In global markets, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan shed 2.7 per cent to its lowest in 18 months. Japan's Nikkei fell 3.4 per cent, the steepest daily drop since March, while the broader TOPIX lost around $195 billion in market value. Shanghai shares touched their lowest since late 2014, while China blue chips slid 3 per cent, according to a report by news agency Reuters.
  10. On Wall Street, the S&P500's sharpest one-day fall since February wiped out around $850 billion of wealth as technology shares tumbled on fears of slowing demand. The S&P 500 ended Wednesday with a loss of 3.29 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite 4.08 per cent, while the Dow shed 2.2 per cent. The blood letting was bad enough to attract the attention of US President Donald Trump, who pointed an accusing finger at the Federal Reserve for raising interest rates. "I really disagree with what the Fed is doing," Mr Trump said. "I think the Fed has gone crazy." (With Reuters inputs)