NIFTY NEARLY ACHIEVES 8670 TARGET
WORLD MARKETS
US indices plunged 1.7%-1.8%
yesterday to touch one-month lows, pressured by a surge in the dollar and
weakness in oil.
The U.S. dollar advanced more than 1%
to 98.55, a 12-year high, as the euro fell below $1.07 for the first time in
nearly 12 years on the beginning of quantitative easing in the euro zone.
Nymex crude fell $1.71 or 3.42% to
$48.3 a barrel after Goldman Sachs said in a note Monday that it expected U.S.
crude to drop as far as $40 a barrel in the near-term. Brent fell $2.14 to
$58.39.
Gold fell to $1160 an ounce, its
lowest since November 2014.
Wholesale inventories for January
rose 0.3%, beating expectations for contraction. The National Federation of
Independent Business' small business index for February was an encouraging
98.0, little changed from January's 97.9.
European markets fell between
0.7%-2.5% with FTSE leading the tally, dragged down by mining stocks.
AT HOME
After falling nearly a percent through the day, benchmark
indices recouped nearly half of the losses in last half an hour to end lower by
half a percent. Sensex settled at 28710, down 135 points while Nifty finished
at 8712, down 45 points. BSE mid-cap and small-cap indices lost 0.4% and 0.3%
respectively. BSE Realty index tumbled 1.8%, becoming top loser among the
sectoral indices, followed by 0.8% cut in Oil & Gas index. Consumer Durable
and Teck indices were the top gainers, putting on 1.2% and 0.8% respectively.
FIIs net sold stocks and index
futures worth Rs 748 cr and 810 cr respectively but net bought stock futures
worth Rs 335 cr. DIIs were net buyers to the tune of Rs 291 cr.
India's current account deficit
narrowed to USD 8.2 bn or 1.6% of GDP in Q3 of 2014-15 from USD 10.1 bn or 2%
of GDP in Q2.
Lok Sabha yesterday passed Land
Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (Amendment) Bill, 2015, popularly
known as the land bill. Government made nine amendments to bill, all of them
were adopted.
OUTLOOK
Today morning, Shanghai and Nikkei
are up 1% and 0.5% respectively, other Asian markets are trading with modest
cuts and SGX Nifty is suggesting a flattish start for our market.
Readers would recall that ever since
Nifty broke 8840, which was the 61.8% retracement level of the recent 8670-9120
upmove, we were working with the downside target of 8670.
The benchmark yesterday touched a low
of 8677 before recovering to 8712, nearly achieving the target mentioned above.
8670 continues to be important level
to eye, a breach of which would break the higher-top higher-bottom formation on
the daily chart.
Immediate resistance on the hourly
chart has moved lower to 8890, a crossover of which is required to generate a
buy on the hourly chart.
Fresh shorts should be initiated only
upon the close below 8670 while longs should wait for the crossover of 8890.
No comments:
Post a Comment