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Sensex rebounded 329 points on Monday as IT and auto stocks led gains, driven by global optimism and hopes of a US Federal Reserve rate cut. Nifty rose 98 points, while midcap and smallcap indices showed mixed performance
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Domestic benchmark indices opened flat to positive in morning trade but turned red during intra-day trade. Sensex and Nifty fell by more than 1 per cent as uncertainty over India-Pakistan relations affected investors' sentiment
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The Indian currency logs the maximum single-day loss on April 8. It earlier recorded such a steep loss in one session on January 13 this year, when it had depreciated by 66 paise
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A report predicts with low vehicle ownership and unique growth drivers, India has a chance to leapfrog, making EVs the first car for many, just as it skipped 3G for 4G. By FY30, EVs could hit 30-35 per cent of annual sales
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HMI Managing Director Unsoo Kim said in a conference call that the car major would be expanding production to meet the growing demand in the domestic market as well as the export market in Africa, the Middle East, Latin America and South Asia
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Nifty witnessed minor profit booking and fell more than 100 points from day's high of 19726.
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Global headwinds are from the rising dollar index at 103.23 and spiking U.S. bond yields, he said. Consequently, FIIs are selling, taking their cash market sell figure in August, till 15th, to Rs 9,867 crore.
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The Sensex opened at 64,836.16 points and raced up to reach a 52 week high of 65,247.74 points. On Friday the Sensex had closed at 64,718.56. points.
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New Delhi: Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have pulled out Rs 17,696 crore from the Indian markets in December so far amid uncertainty due to a new coronavirus strain, Omicron, and expectations of faster tapering by the US Federal Reserve. According to the depositories data, FPIs took out Rs 13,470 crore from equities, Rs 4,066 crore […]
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Large cloud players are expected to take up capacities to meet the increasing demand, Aggarwal said.
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Against its 43rd rank in Q4 2019, India saw a decline of 3.6 per cent year-on-year in home prices finishing last at 56th rank, according to Knight Frank report
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According to FPI statistics available with depositories, overseas investors pumped in a net of Rs 19,473 crore into equities but pulled out Rs 4,824 crore from the debt segment between January 1 and January 29.
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For the equity segment, this is the highest quantum of money invested ever since the FPI data has been made available by the National Securities Depository Ltd.