Indian shares opened lower, ahead of the US Federal Reserve's release of minutes from its December meeting, in which the central bank is expected to give a glimpse of its policy tightening path
RIL rose 1.06 per cent and contributed the most to the Sensex, followed by ICICI bank, which rose 1.3 per cent
After closing three weeks with losses, the benchmark indices ended the last week of 2022 with gains
The Sensex declined 3.5 per cent in December - its worst last-month returns since 2011
Outperform most global peers even as returns moderate to just over 4% in 2022
CLOSING BELL: The NSE Nifty 50 declined 86 points to 18,105, and was up 4.3 per cent for the year 2022. Broader indices - the BSE Midcap and Smallcap outperformed in trades on Friday.
Some investment bankers argued that the reason for tepid fundraising through QIPs and rights could also be due to the fact that companies this year were not in need of large capital
CLOSING BELL: The S&P BSE Sensex gained 732 points from the day's low, while the Nifty 50 jumped 218 points in intra-day trades, partly on account of short-covering owing to the monthly F&O expiry.
So far in calendar year (CY22), frontline indices Nifty50 and the S&P BSE Sensex have climbed around 4 per cent each, as against 10-20 per cent fall in most of the global indices
CLOSING BELL: Auto majors - Maruti and Mahindra & Mahindra were the other prominent gainers among the Sensex 30, while Bharti Airtel and Tata Steel declined around a per cent each
Benchmark stock indices Sensex and Nifty closed higher for a second straight day on Tuesday on gains in banking, IT and metal shares following a firm trend in the global markets
CLOSING BELL: The BSE Metal index surged over 4.5 per cent amid reports of China further relaxing its zero Covid policy.
The Nifty reclaimed the 18,000 mark and ended the session at 18,014, a gain of 208 points or 1.1 per cent
CLOSING BELL: The NSE Nifty shut shop at 18,015, up 208 points. Broader indices outperformed the benchmarks with gains of up to 3 per cent.
After liquidity-fuelled bull run, the BSE Sensex faced its moment of reckoning in 2022 as Russia marched into Ukraine, the US Federal Reserve came out all guns blazing in its war against inflation
During the week, the Sensex fell 2.4 per cent and the Nifty 2.5 per cent, their worst weekly decline since June 17, 2022
Both Sensex and Nifty post biggest losses since Sept 26 as Covid cases in China, oil price spike worsen sentiment
All sectors, meanwhile, drowned in the sea of red, with Nifty Media, Nifty Metal, Nifty Realty, and Nifty PSU Bank indices declining up to 6 per cent
Market at close: The pain was even more severe in the broader market space where the BSE MidCap and SmallCap indices fell 3 and 4 per cent, respectively
Surrender early gains; banks, automotive stocks among biggest losers