Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Markets give up gains as virus concerns weigh

- Press Trust of India feedback@livemint.com

TRADERS SAID THE PREVIOUS SESSION’S EUPHORIA EVAPORATED AND VOLATILITY SET IN ON ACCOUNT OF SPECULATIO­N THAT THE CENTRAL GOVERNMENT WAS MULLING LOCKDOWN EXTENSION BEYOND APRIL 14

MUMBAI: Equity benchmarks failed to hold on to intra-day gains on Wednesday as investors turned jittery amid an unabated rise in coronaviru­s cases.

Plunging over 1,300 points from the day’s high, the 30-share BSE Sensex ended 173.25 points or 0.58% lower at 29,893.96. It hit an intra-day high of 31,227.97.

Similarly, t he NSE Nifty closed 43.45 points, or 0.49% down at 8,748.75. Traders said the previous session’s euphoria evaporated and volatility set in on account of speculatio­n that the central government was mulling lockdown extension beyond April 14.

Further, the Indian markets moved i n s ync with gl obal benchmarks as worries over the economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic continued to weigh on investor sentiment.

TCS was the top loser in the Sensex pack, shedding 3.91%, followed by Titan (3.47%), ICICI Bank ( 2 . 1 8 %), SBI ( 1 . 8 5 %), Bharti Airtel (1.80%) and ITC (1.60%).

On t h e o t h e r h a n d , S u n Pharma, NTPC, Indusind Bank and Bajaj Finance were among the top gainers, spurting up to 4.69%.

“Markets gave up gains, following a negative opening in the European markets and uncertaint­y regarding the spread of Covid-19 infections. Markets are also uncertain as to the government response after the official 21-day lockdown expires on April 14.

“Some states are looking to extend the lockdown and some are f or withdrawin­g i t i n a phased manner. The longer the l o c kdown s t a ys , more t he impact on the economy and companies,” said Vinod Nair, head o f r e s e ar c h at Geoji t Financial Services.

BSE realty, consumer durables, IT, teck, telecom and banking indices ended in the red, while healthcare, auto and utilities rose.

Broader BSE midcap and smallcap indices outperform­ed the benchmarks, jumping up to 1.90%. Global sentiment turned negative after the US posted a record single-day jump of over 1,800 covid-19 deaths.

Bourses in Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Seoul ended in the red, while Tokyo closed on a posit i ve note. Benchmark exchanges Europe were trading around 2% lower in the morning session.

Brent crude f utures, t he global oil benchmark, slipped marginally to $31.85 per barrel.

Meanwhile, the rupee provisiona­lly settled 70 paise lower at 76.34 against t he US dollar. Forex traders said rising Brent crude prices and a firm US currency also weighed on the local unit.

The death toll due to the novel coronaviru­s rose to 149 and the number of cases to 5,194 in India on Wednesday, according to the Health Ministry.

Global tally of the infections has crossed 14 lakh, with over 82,000 deaths.

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