Bear attack: Equity investors become poorer by Rs 8.91 lakh crore in single day
The market capitalization of BSE-listed companies eroded by Rs 8,91,729.43 crore to Rs 3,50,19,998.87 crore.
NEW DELHI: Equity investors became poorer by Rs 8.91 lakh crore on Wednesday as markets came under a bear attack, with the benchmark Sensex falling almost 931 points after hitting its fresh all-time high level.
Erasing all its early gains, the 30-share BSE Sensex crashed 930.88 points or 1.30 percent to settle at 70,506.31 points.
The index opened higher and later gained 475.88 points or 0.66 percent to hit its all-time high of 71,913.07 points.
However, broad-based selling pulled down the benchmark to the day’s low of 70,302.60 points.
The market capitalization of BSE-listed companies eroded by Rs 8,91,729.43 crore to Rs 3,50,19,998.87 crore.
“Markets were on a record-setting spree for a while and have been in an overbought zone, so hiccups were expected in the form of profit-taking which came to the fore today. Redemption was seen across the sectors, and even mid and small-cap stocks came under the grip of a strong bear hammering,” Prashanth Tapse, Senior Vice President (Research) at Mehta Equities Ltd, said.
Among the Sensex firms, Tata Steel fell the most by 4.21 percent.
NTPC, Tata Motors, HCL Technologies, Mahindra & Mahindra, State Bank of India, Power Grid, Tech Mahindra, Larsen & Toubro, and JSW Steel also declined.
HDFC Bank emerged as the only gainer from the pack. In the broader market, the BSE small-cap gauge fell 3.42 percent and the mid-cap index declined 3.12 percent.
All the indices ended lower, with utilities tumbling 4.65 percent, telecommunication plummeting 4.36 percent, power declining 4.33 percent, services falling 4.20 percent, metal (3.57 percent), commodities (3.51 percent), industrials (2.85 percent), capital goods (2.83 percent) and consumer discretionary (2.55 percent).
A total of 3,177 stocks declined while 658 advanced and 86 remained unchanged.
“The domestic market saw a sharp and abrupt sell-off in the second half, despite the positive trend in global peers. This is attributable to profit booking from the recent sharp rally stretching valuations of mid-and small-cap stocks. The recent uptick in crude prices prompted investors to book profits,” Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services, said.
The BSE benchmark had climbed 122.10 points or 0.17 percent to settle at 71,437.19 points on Tuesday.
The Nifty had gained 34.45 points or 0.16 percent to 21,453.10 points.
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