US, EUROPE TUMBLE ON US TRADE DATA, GREEK WORRIES; 8240 CONTINUES TO BE
IMMEDIATE SUPPORT FOR NIFTY
WORLD MARKETS
US indices ended with steep cuts of 0.8%-1.6% yesterday
amid renewed concerns over the state of the U.S. economy and Greece.
The March trade deficit came in at $51.4 billion, above
expectations and the largest since 2008 as imports surged, which sparked
concerns about economic growth for the first quarter. February's figure was
increased slightly to $35.9 billion from $35.4 billion. On the positive side,
April's non-manufacturing ISM hit a five-month high, coming in at 57.8 versus
the expected 56.3 and March's 56.5.
Longer-term bond yields extended gains after the economic
reports, with the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield hitting a high of 2.22 percent
for the first time since March 10.
Greek stocks and bonds sold off on media reports that the
International Monetary Fund may cut a funding lifeline to Greece unless its
European partners accept more debt writedowns. Germany's finance minister later
rebuffed the report. Athens is facing a 750-million-euro ($832 million) debt
repayment to the International Monetary Fund next week, but there are fears it
will run out of cash unless it reaches a deal with creditors to unlock the next
tranche of bailout money.
Nymex oil shot up $1.47 or 2.5% to $60.40 a barrel, its
highest since December 10. Brent climbed $1.05 to $67.50.
European markets, except a 0.8% lower FTSE, saw steep cuts
in the vicinity of two and a half percent. Meanwhile European Commission raised
eurozone economic growth forecast for 2015 to 1.5% from 1.3%.
Earlier, Chinese shares plummeted 4% amid reports of
brokerages raising margin requirements.
AT HOME
Benchmark indices ended modestly lower after a choppy
trading session. Sensex settled at 27440, down 50 points while Nifty lost 7
points to finish at 8325. BSE mid-cap and small-cap indices however gained 0.1%
and 0.6% respectively. BSE Metal index soared 2.9%, becoming top gainer among
the sectoral indices, followed by 1% rise in Oil & Gas index. Power and
Consumer Durable indices lost 0.8% and 0.6% respectively.
Kotak Mahindra reported better-than-estimated 29.4% rise
in fourth quarter net profit at Rs 527 cr. NII rose 16.2% to Rs 1123 cr. Gross
NPA improved to 1.85% from 1.87% sequentially and Net NPAs improved to 0.92% from
0.97%. The bank announced issue of bonus shares in the ratio of 1:1.
FIIs net sold stocks and index futures worth Rs 757 cr and
924 cr respectively but net bought stock futures worth Rs 1030 cr. DIIs were
net buyers to the tune of Rs 979 cr.
Rupee depreciated 2 paise to end at 63.44/$.
Congress yesterday supported Goods and Services Tax (GST)
in Lok Sabha but opposed some of the provisions of the bill on it introduced by
the BJP government, demanding that it be sent to the Parliamentary Standing
Committee, which was supported by parties like AIADMK and BJD. TMC said it was
"broadly supporting" the bill while AIADMK said it was against it as
Tamil Nadu ruled by it would lose over Rs 10000 crore due to the new tax
structure.
The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Bill 2013
will be referred to a Select Committee by the Rajya Sabha today.
OUTLOOK
Today morning Shanghai and Hang Seng are trading modestly
higher, other Asian markets are in red and SGX Nifty is suggesting about 35
points lower opening for our market.
After Nifty crossed the immediate hurdle of 8308 on
Monday, we had recommended going long with the stop loss of 8240 for the target
of about 8500. That continues to be the view.
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