EBOLA, GROWTH WORRIES SPARK RISK-OFF TRADE; 7785-7972
CONTINUES TO BE RANGE FOR NIFTY
WORLD MARKETS
US
indices, after plunging nearly 3% intraday amid worries over global growth and
the spread of Ebola, recovered quite a bit in the late noon trade to end with
cuts ranging from 0.3%-1.1%.
Reports
of diagnosis of another Ebola case in the US weighed on the sentiment. Also,
U.S. retail sales fell 0.3% in September, slightly more than the expected 0.2% decline.
Business inventories rose less than expected in August. The producer price
index for September fell 0.1% as opposed to expectations of a 0.1% gain.
Fed
released its "Beige Book" that said the economy is growing at a
"modest to moderate" pace.
Bank of
America posted a smaller-than-expected loss, while BlackRock reported
better-than-expected earnings.
The U.S.
10-year Treasury note yield dipped below 2 percent for the first time since May
2013. Nymex crude settled down 6 cents to $81.8 a barrel; Gold rose $10.5 to
$1242 an ounce.
European
markets nosedived between 2%-4%. Greece plunged 6% on political uncertainty.
Greek Prime Minister won a confidence vote last week, which called for
lawmakers to back plans to exit an international bailout program early.
Greek
bond yields crossed 7% threshold while 10-year German yields fell to another
record on safe haven buying.
AT HOME
On Tuesday, benchmark
indices ended with modest cuts after a choppy trading session. Sensex lost 35
points to settle at 26349 while Nifty finished at 7864, down 20 points. BSE
mid-cap and small-cap indices lost 0.2% and 0.1% respectively. BSE Realty index
nosedived 9.2%, becoming top loser among the sectoral indices, followed by 0.8%
cut in IT index. Power index and Bankex gained 0.5% each.
FIIs net sold stocks
and index futures worth Rs 695 cr and 303 cr respectively but net bought stock
futures worth Rs 93 cr. DIIs were net buyers to the tune of Rs 496 cr.
Rupee fell 31 paise
to close at 61.41/$.
DLF plunged after
SEBI barred the company from accessing the capital market for three years for
non-disclosure of its 2007 IPO documents.
WPI inflation for September
cooled off to a 5-year low at 2.38% vs 3.74% in August on lower food and fuel
price.
India's trade
deficit in September widened to a 16-month high of $14.25 bn as imports surged
26% y-o-y to $43.2 bn while exports grew a tepid 2.7% to $28.9 bn.
OUTLOOK
Today morning,
Nikkei is down more than 2% on strengthening yen. Other Asian markets are
trading with average cuts of a percent. SGX Nifty is trading at 7880, which is
15 point lower than Tuesday's closing of Nifty future.
In the assembly
election held yesterday, Haryana recorded all-time high 73% turnout while
Maharashtra saw 64% turnout. Most of the exit polls predicted that BJP will
form government in both the states.
While Nifty has
been repeatedly bouncing back from the crucial 7785 support, we have been
indicating that the resumption of higher-top higher-bottom formation is required
to turn the near term view bullish. Therefore, in Tuesday's report we had
termed 7785-7972 a no-trading zone where 7972 is the immediate previous top on
the daily chart.
That continues to
be the view. Traders are advised to wait for the crossover of 7785-7972 range
on either side for taking a fresh view on Nifty. A breach of 7785 can take
Nifty all the way to 7540 while a crossover of 7972 can take it in the vicinity
of 8180.
TCS and Hero Moto
Corp will report their quarterly earnings today.
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