IT’S A DONE DEAL FOR INSURANCE BILL, FINALLY
WORLD MARKETS
US indices surged 0.9%-1.5%
yesterday, with the Dow and S & P 500 turning positive for the year, on the
back of a weaker dollar and as mixed economic data tapered expectations that
the Federal Reserve will hike rates mid-year.
Retail sales for February fell 0.6%,
missing expectations of a slight gain. Weekly jobless claims fell more than
expected to 289,000, below the prior week's 320,000.
Import prices for February rose 0.4%,
versus a revised decline of 3.1% in January. Export prices declined 0.1%, less
than January's decline of 1.9%.
Dollar index fell about half a
percent, pausing its recent rally. The euro edged higher to $1.06, up from
12-year lows hit yesterday.
Nymex crude fell 2.3% to $47.05 a
barrel. Brent fell 50 cents to $57 a barrel.
European markets, except a 0.6%
higher FTSE, ended with modest cuts.
AT HOME
After a gap up opening, benchmark indices added some more
gains through the session to end higher by about nine tenth of a percent,
breaking 3-day losing streak. Sensex gained 271 points to settle at 28930 while
Nifty finished at 8776, up 76 points. BSE mid-cap and small-cap indices gained
1.2% and 0.9% respectively. All the BSE sectoral indices ended in green with
Power and Consumer Durable indices leading the tally, putting on 2.3% and 1.5%
respectively.
FIIs net bought stocks and index futures worth Rs 733 cr
and 126 cr respectively but net sold stock futures worth Rs 99 cr. DIIs were
net sellers to the tune of Rs 382 cr.
Rupee appreciated 28 paise to end at 62.50/$.
In a major boost to the government’s reform agenda, the
Rajya Sabha yesterday gave the go-ahead to the insurance bill, raising the
ceiling for foreign investment in insurance companies to 49% from 26%. The move
to increase the foreign investment cap in insurance companies will kick-start
the industry, which has been struggling for lack of capital. It would also
boost infrastructure funding since only an insurance corpus can fund
long-gestation public works projects.
February Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose to 5.37% Vs 5.11%
in January mainly due to a spike in food inflation. IIP for January came in at
2.6%, much higher than the estimated 0.47% and better than 1.7% in December.
OUTLOOK
Today morning Nikkei is up more than a percent, crossing
the 19000 mark and touching a fresh 15-year high. Other Asian markets are
trading with gains in the vicinity of half a percent and SGX Nifty is
suggesting about 55 points higher opening for our market.
After Nifty nearly achieved the downside target of 8670 on
Tuesday, we had advised booking profit in short positions and remain on
sideline till downside support placed at 8670 or the immediate resistance
placed at 8850 are crossed.
After today's gap up opening, benchmark will be closer to
the 8850 resistance, a sustained trading above which would generate a buy on
the hourly chart and open up the space for the further upside till about 8950.
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