Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

SENSEX DROPS 800 POINTS

Sensex sees biggest drop since Feb 2; rupee hits fresh low of 73.82

- Ami Shah ami.s@livemint.com

The equity benchmark Sensex on Thursday hit its lowest level in three months, crashing over 806 points to close below the 35,200-level as concerns over weakening rupee and rising crude oil prices spooked investors. Similarly, the NSE Nifty cracked the 10,600level by falling 259 points.

The rupee plunged to an all-time low (intra-day) of 73.81 to the US dollar and global crude oil prices touched a four-year high of USD 86 a barrel.

There was no respite for the Indian markets as the free fall continued for the second straight session with the rupee recording new lows and the benchmark Sensex declining by more than 800 points with the deteriorat­ing macro-economic scenario continuing to worsen investor sentiment.

The rupee ended at 73.58 a dollar, down 0.33% from Wednesday’s close. In intra-day trading, the local currency touched a fresh low of 73.82.

BSE’s 30-share Sensex plunged 806.47 points, or 2.24%, its biggest decline since 2 February, to close at 35,169.16. The National Stock Exchange’s 50-share Nifty fell 2.39%, its biggest such decline since 11 November 2016, to close at 10,599.25.

The depreciati­ng rupee, rising crude, and liquidity fears have led to a collapse in investor confidence.

“There has been a complete turnaround in sentiment, triggered by a confluence of factors. It started off with IL&FS and its fallout on the NBFC sector, followed by the worsening macro with rising crude prices and falling rupee,” said Deepak Ramachandr­a, head of sales, India equities, Bank of America-Merrill Lynch. “The sentiment has turned to ‘sell the bounce’ than ‘buy the dip’ not so long ago.”

According to Ramachandr­a, with the rupee convincing­ly crossing 73 and oil getting costassist­ant lier, there was no real reason for the market to rebound.

Provisiona­l data from the NSE show that foreign institutio­nal investors (FIIs) sold a net of Rs 2,760.43 crore of Indian equities on Thursday, while domestic institutio­nal investors (DIIs) bought a net of Rs 1,823.59 crore of Indian shares.

FIIs have sold a net of $2.5 billion of Indian shares from year to date, while DIIs have stocked up a net of Rs 85,364. 69 crore of the asset class. “There are hardly any incrementa­l FII buyers in the market. Domestic flows have turned sluggish, SIPs (systematic investment plans) have slowed and discretion­ary money is not getting into mutual funds,” said Ramachandr­a.

“To add to macro headwinds, we have key state elections later this year and then the Lok Sabha polls in May 2019. In such a situation, there is no compelling reason for new money to enter Indian stocks,” he added.

Short-selling also added to investors’ woes. “Short-selling is happening across the market, with a lot of stocks seeing substantia­l addition in open interest, indicating that there is more pain in the offing,” said Ravi Sharma, vice president, institutio­nal equity (derivative­s), Prabhudas Lilladher Pvt. Ltd.

In Friday’s trading, for every share that advanced on BSE, more than two shares declined. All sectoral indices closed lower, with the BSE energy index and BSE oil and gas index declining the most. They shed 6.66% and 6.58%, respective­ly.

Reliance Industries Ltd fell 7%, contributi­ng the most to Sensex’s losses. HDFC Bank Ltd followed with a 3.46% fall.

“FIIs are selling and they sell what’s saleable in the market. Their exit is driven by the threat of the rupee depreciati­ng further,” said Deven Choksey, group managing director, KR Choksey Investment Managers Pvt. Ltd, adding that to protect their portfolios from currency loss (markto-market), FIIs are taking out funds from Indian markets, besides other markets. “Second, due to loss they have in other markets, they are selling their jewels in Indian markets for paying off those losses, incurred elsewhere.”

State-run oil marketing companies took a beating after the government announced a cut in excise duty on petrol and diesel by ₹2.50 a litre. Out of this, oil marketing companies were asked to bear a loss of ₹1 per litre.

Indian Oil Corp. Ltd, Hindustan Petroleum Corp. Ltd and Bharat Petroleum Corp. Ltd tumbled 10.57%, 12.23% and 10.89%, respective­ly.

(Ravindra Sonavane contribute­d to this story.)

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