NIFTY ON TRACK TO ACHIEVE 7480 TARGET; TRAIL STOP LOSS TO 7655
WORLD MARKETS
US indices plunged 1%-1.5% yesterday
with financials leading declines. Continued strength in the yen against the
dollar renewed concerns about global growth and the effectiveness of central
bank policy.
Yen touched 107.7, the highest level
against the US dollar since October 2014 before recovering to 108.4.
Nymex oil broke two-day win streak to
settle 49 cents or 1.3% lower at $37.26 a barrel. Gold rose $14 to $1237 an
ounce.
Weekly jobless claims came in at
267,000 vs estimate of 270000.
Treasury yields fell, following
renewed declines in the German 10-year bund yield. The 2-year yield touched a
low of 0.692%, its lowest since Feb. 24, while the 10-year yield touched
1.685%, its lowest since Feb. 25.
European markets fell between
0.4%-2.4% with Italy leading the losses.
AT HOME
Benchmark indices tumbled nine tenth
of a percent in today's trade to close at the lowest level since 17th March.
Sensex slumped 215 points to settle at 24685 while Nifty ended at 7546, down 68
points. BSE mid-cap and small-cap indices lost 0.4% each. BSE Consumer Durable
and IT indices fell 2% and 1.2% respectively, becoming top losers among the
sectoral indices while Energy and Healthcare indices were the top gainers, up
0.6% each.
FIIs net sold stocks and index
futures worth Rs 295 cr and 1474 cr respectively but net bought stock futures
worth Rs 125 cr. DIIs were net sellers to the tune of Rs 16 cr.
Rupee appreciated 18 paise to end at
66.47/$.
Tata Power plunged after reports said
that the Appellate Tribunal for Electricity has denied compensatory tariff for
the Indonesian coal-based power plants of Tata Power and Adani Power and has
also adjudicated that the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission cannot levy
compensatory tariff.
On the flip side, BHEL climbed after
provisional results indicated that the company is likely to post net profit of
around Rs 400 cr in January-March quarter after reporting a net loss in
previous two quarters. Turnover declined
13.7% to Rs 26,700 crore in FY16 against Rs 30,947 crore in earlier year.
However, order inflows increased by 42% to Rs 43,727 crore from Rs 30,814 crore
in same period.
OUTLOOK
Today morning Asian markets are
trading with cuts of 0.7%-1.1% with Nikkei leading on the way down and SGX
Nifty is suggesting a flattish start for our market.
After sounding cautious near the
important 34-week moving average hurdle, we had advised going short once the
benchmark sustains below 7666, which was the immediate previous bottom on the
hourly chart. We were working with the initial downside target of 7582, which
was the bottom made last week below which we had said that the next support
will come around 7480.
The benchmark after breaking 7666
support on Tuesday has been under pressure and yesterday plunged to 7546,
moving towards 7480 target and vindicating our view.
7480 continues to be the downside
target to eye. Immediate resistance on the hourly chart has moved lower to
7655, with the stop loss of which short positions should be held on to.
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