Business Standard

Half of BSE 500 below 200-DMA

- AVDHUT BAGKAR & SUNDAR SETHURAMAN

More than half the BSE 500 stocks are trading below their 200-daily moving average (DMA), even as the benchmark Sensex hit a record high of 40,302 on Monday. According to the data compiled by Business Standard, 262 of the BSE 500 stocks and a third of Sensex components are trading below their 200-DMA, underscori­ng the trend that the market up-move has been supported only by a few influentia­l stocks.

Among the Sensex stocks, Tata Steel, Vedanta, and YES Bank continue to trade below their 200 DMA. Among the BSE 500 stocks, several stocks are over 50 per cent below their 200-DMA.

Market experts said until the broader market did not participat­e in the rally, the sustainabi­lity will always remain a question.

Analysts said many stocks in the BSE 500 universe have broken their crucial support levels and it is difficult for them to bounce back in the near term.

“Many stocks, which have been dipped below their monthly swing lows, are still struggling and not able to recover fast. Once you break the swing lows, there is little buying interest, and the stock plummets. Until they are trading below 200 DMA, they will not move further,” said Rohit Singre, senior technical analyst, LKP Securities.

The 200-DMA is a key technical indicator followed by many analysts. The 200-DMA is loosely the rolling oneyear price for a security. If a stock trades above its 200-DMA, it is considered to be in the bullish zone. Experts say the bulk of institutio­nal money is getting channelise­d into few stocks.

“Of the BSE 500, 77 per cent of all domestic institutio­nal investment­s and 63 per cent of foreign investment­s between July 2018 and June 2019 have gone into the top 50 companies. This is compared to 36 per cent and 35 per cent, respective­ly, between July 2016 and June 2017,” said Deepak Jasani, head of retail research, HDFC Securities.

Stock prices of Coffee Day Enterprise­s, DHFL, Reliance Capital, Reliance Communicat­ions, and Lakshmi Vilas Bank are currently more than 70 per cent below their 200DMA. “A lot of the small and midcap companies may not revisit their recent highs in many months to come due to disrupted business, heightened competitio­n, the slowdown in the economy, liquidity issues and governance lapses,” said Jasani.

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