Equity benchmarks witnessed a volatile trading session on Wednesday, swinging between gains and losses before closing in the red, as investors remained cautious ahead of the Reserve Bank of India monetary policy decision due Friday.
The SENSEX began the day on a positive note at 78,704.60, higher than its previous close of 78,583.81, but eventually succumbed to selling pressure to end at 78,271.28, down 312.53 points or 0.40 per cent. Similarly, the NIFTY50 opened at 23,738.40 against its last close of 23,739.25, but closed lower at 23,696.30, declining 42.95 points or 0.18 per cent.
“Today, the benchmark indices witnessed narrow range activity,” observed Shrikant Chouhan, Head Equity Research at Kotak Securities. “A small bearish candle formation on the daily charts and lackluster intraday activity indicate the continuation of non-directional momentum in the near future.”
The market displayed significant volatility throughout the session, with the Nifty touching an intraday high of 23,807 in early trade before retreating. “The benchmark index initiated the trading session on a positive note; however, it reached the day’s high within the initial minutes at 23,807. Subsequently, it was unable to maintain this peak and experienced mild profit-taking,” explained Ameya Ranadive, Sr Technical Analyst at StoxBox.
👉Jyothy Labs: The stock of Jyothy Labs, which has been in a downtrend since September last year, is now showing indications of a bullish trend reversal. It found support at ₹365 early last week and rebounded. And towards the end of last week, it broke out of a resistance at ₹410, considerably increasing the odds of a rally from the current level.
👉RBI Preview: Rate cuts to commence; to complement non-conventional easing
While a conventional 25bps rate cut in the upcoming MPC policy is less of a market debate, the actions around ‘what beyond a cut’ will be more watched. Easing by stealth via unconventional policy tools like liquidity and regulatory measures will continue. The RBI may also want to address the stress in the non-sovereign money market. We expect another round of ~Rs300bn OMOs, implying Rs900 bn+ in total in FY25E. A CRR cut is a close call, but a temporary cut may not address the underlying banking stress. Easing in ensuing tighter LCR norms (Apr-25 onwards) and lending standards might be a preferred policy tool. We will also watch for additional capital account easing actions via the FCNR route.
💪source: Business Line, icharts.in
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