Hindustan Times (Delhi)

HCL’S ₹4,000 CR BUYBACK OFFER TO COMMENCE ON SEPTEMBER 18

- Ami Shah and Gopika Gopakumar ami.s@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: IT services firm HCL Technologi­es on Tuesday said its ₹4,000 crore buyback offer will commence on September 18. The company’s shareholde­rs had last month approved the buyback proposal. The date for opening of the buyback has been set for September 18 and will close on October 3, HCL Technologi­es said in a BSE filing. “...in accordance with the SEBI (Buy Back of Securities) Regulation­s, 1998, the Company has, on September 10, 2018, completed the dispatch of the letter of offer dated September 7, 2018 for the buyback to all the equity shareholde­rs/ beneficial owners of the equity shares as on the record date being August 31, 2018,” it added. In July, HCL Technologi­es had announced the buyback programme for FY19 at ₹1,100 per share. Sensex Absolute change MUMBAI: Benchmark equity indices Sensex and Nifty fell the most in nearly six months to their lowest close in six weeks as trade war tensions kept world markets on edge. The rupee hit a new record low against the dollar, rattling investor sentiment.

The BSE’S 30-share Sensex fell 1.34%, or 509.04 points, to 37,413.13 points, while the National Stock Exchange’s 50-share Nifty fell 1.32% to close at 11,287.50 points.

It was the biggest fall for both indices since March 16, and the lowest close since August 2. In the last two days, the Sensex has fallen 976.69 points or 2.54%.

Trade war tensions, a weakening rupee, and rising crude oil prices hurt investor sentiment. The rupee tumbled to a fresh record low of 72.74 against the dollar. It shed 0.34% during the day to close at 72.70. Brent crude gained 0.67% to trade at $77.89 per barrel. It has risen 16.48% so far in 2018.

“The combinatio­n of higher crude oil prices, bond yields and rupee are responsibl­e for the negative sentiment. Talks of trade wars added to the woes,” said Hemang Jani, head, advisory, at retail-focused brokerage Sharekhan, owned by BNP Paribas.

Bond yield spiked further, tracking weakness in the rupee. The 10-year bond yield closed at 8.184%, the highest since November 2014, from Monday’s close of 8.158%. Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions.

“The bond market is analysing the measures that RBI will take to stem the rupee. The depreciati­on in rupee over the last five sessions has been momentum driven rather than fundamenta­l or dollar strengthen­ing sessions. The market has already priced in a 50 basis points rate hike in the next policy or maybe before that,” said Jayesh Mehta, head of treasury at Bank of America-merrill Lynch.

Net inflows into domestic mutual funds dropped 11.39% to ₹8,375 crore in August—a fivemonth low—because of the uncertaint­ies in the market. Inflows from domestic institutio­nal investors (DIIS), which have been the key driver for the equity market this year, dropped to their lowest since January, in August. Year to date, DIIS infused ₹70,531.49 crore in Indian equities. “The slowdown in flows is apparent and not lending support to the market,” Jani added.

Foreign institutio­nal investors have been net sellers with the year to date with net sales of $465.62 million. “There is also a concern on how will the recentlyag­gressive set of NBFCS, (nonbanking finance companies) deal with the sudden spike in bond yields, and the continued volatility on that front,” said Jani.

However, the long-term perspectiv­e for the market stayed positive. “We need to remember that India has still outperform­ed the Asia/em pack for last few months. The market has reacted to the weakening rupee and firm bond yields over last two days and it is a short-term damper,” said Vaibhav Sanghavi, CO-CEO of Avendus Capital Public Markets Alternativ­e Strategies LLP.

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