DOLLAR INDEX TUMBLES TO FIVE MONTH LOW WHILE OIL
CLIMBS TO 2016 HIGH; NIFTY FAILS TO TAKE OUT 7600 HURDLE
WORLD MARKETS
US indices gained 0.2%-0.9% yesterday
on the back of rising oil and a positive view of the Fed's Wednesday
announcement. Materials, Industrials and Energy were the best performing
sectors. Dow turned positive for the year, recouping 11% loss.
Nymex oil soared 4.5% to $40.20 a
barrel for its highest settle of the year so far as the dollar weakened and
talk continued about an April 17 meeting of OPEC and non-OPEC producers. Brent
rose $1.21 to $41.54.
US weekly jobless claims came in at
265,000. The March Philly Fed index was 12.4 versus minus 2.8 for February.
Fourth-quarter current account data showed a deficit of $125.3 billion. Leading
indicators for February rose 0.1%.
In Europe, FTSE and Spain gained 0.4%
and 0.2% respectively while CAC, DAX and Italy fell 0.4%, 0.9% and 0.7%
respectively. The Bank of England voted 9-0 to keep the U.K. main interest rate
at 0.5% — marking the seventh straight year of record-low interest rates. The
central bank of Norway cut its key interest rate to an all-time low of 0.5%
from 0.75% and raised the prospect of a move into negative territory.
Dollar index fell more than a percent
and touched its lowest level since October 2015. Against the Yen, dollar hit
the lowest level since October 2014. Gold climbed $35 to $1265 an ounce.
AT HOME
After Wednesday's dramatic recovery,
yesterday was a day of dramatic fall as benchmark indices, after gaining more
than a percent in the morning trade, gave away all the gains in the late noon
sell-off to end near zero line. Sensex settled at 24677, down 5 points while
Nifty managed to gain 14 points to finish at 7513. BSE mid-cap and small-cap
indices gained 0.5% and 0.1% respectively. BSE Oil & Gas and Basic Material
indices gained 2.3% and 1.3% respectively, becoming top gainers among the
sectoral indices while Healthcare and Realty indices fell 1.2% and 0.9%
respectively, becoming top losers.
FIIs net bought stocks, index futures
and stock futures worth Rs 744 cr, 592 cr and 444 cr respectively. DIIs were
net sellers to the tune of Rs 168 cr.
Rupee appreciated 48 paise to end at
66.75/$.
OUTLOOK
Today morning Nikkei is down more
than a percent and half on the back of strengthening Yen. Other Asian markets
are trading with modest gains and SGX Nifty is suggesting about 30 points
higher opening for our market.
In yesterday's report we had clearly
mentioned that after a gap up opening Nifty would be again close to important
7600 hurdle, a crossover of which is required for the fresh upmove. We had also
advised waiting for the crossover of the top made in first hour for taking long
positions.
The benchmark made a top of 7585 in
the first hour of trade but could not cross it and plunged sharply in the late
noon trade to end at 7513.
We reiterate the view that 7600 continues to be an
important hurdle, a crossover of which is required for fresh upmove. On the way
down, 7405, the bottom made on Wednesday, is the immediate support.
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