Saturday 25 May 2019

Sensex, Nifty end at record closing high as investors cheer BJP's victory

The benchmark indices ended at record closing highs on Friday, surpassing the previous closing high that was touched on Monday. A sharp slide in global crude oil prices boosted domestic equities and the rupee on Friday.
Investor sentiment has been buoyant, following the Narendra Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party's landslide victory in the general election, said experts.
The benchmark Sensex ended 623 points, or 1.61 per cent, higher to end at 39,435, while the Nifty50 jumped 187 points, or 1.6 per cent, higher to close at 11,844. Both the indices logged their best weekly performance in nearly seven weeks — gaining over 4 per cent on the back of election euphoria.
It was the best day-after-election-results performance for the markets since 1998. The rupee jumped 0.7 per cent against the US dollar to end at 69.53 over its previous day's close of 70.
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Market players attributed the appreciation in the rupee to sharp foreign inflows. Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) bought shares worth Rs 2,026 crore on Friday, extending their weekly buying tally to Rs 5,891 crore.
Sensex, Nifty end at record closing high as investors cheer BJP's victory Brent crude oil prices fell 4.5 per cent on Thursday and were down over 6 per cent for the week. Prices, however, edged slightly higher on Friday amid gains in global equities.
Experts said decline in oil prices would improve India's macroeconomic picture, provided there was more leeway for the government to push through reform measures and help corporates. "Stability in the macro environment will give legroom to the corporate houses to plan medium-to-long-term growth and instill confidence in foreign investors," said Vishal Kampani, managing director, JM Financial Group.
Market experts said certain FPIs were increasing their India allocation following the election outcome.

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"With the ruling BJP set for another five-year term, political risks have reduced and market expectations of the government's continuity have been addressed," said Ravi Muthukrishnan, head of institutional research at Elara Capital.
"However, the current level of corporate fundamentals, geopolitical developments, such as trade wars and US-Iran conflict, and the progress of monsoon will weigh on the markets," he added.
Experts point out that the markets are currently trading at valuations higher than their historical averages. The Nifty is currently trading at more than 18 times its estimated one-year forward earnings, compared to the 10-year average of 16 times.
For meaningful uptick in the markets, corporate earnings growth has to see a significant improvement, which is only possible over the next two or three quarters, experts said. Some, however, said in the near term, the markets could overshoot valuations due to the favourable election verdict.

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