The BSE Sensex gained 0.89 per cent, or 311 points, to close at 35,081.82, while the National Stock Exchange’s Nifty ended 0.82 per cent, or 88 points, higher at 10,788.55.
Axis Bank gained 4.7 per cent, most among the Sensex components, followed by State Bank of India (SBI), which gained 3.4 per cent, and ICICI Bank that rose 2.7 per cent after the yield on the 10-year government security softened by 12 basis points (bps) to 7.26 per cent. A day earlier, banking and financial shares had tumbled after the 10-year bond yield had jumped 11 bps.
On Wednesday, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) bought shares worth Rs 6.25 billion, while domestic investors were net buyers to the tune of Rs 1.7 billion.
Surging bond yields and fears of fiscal slippages have spooked investors in the recent past. Experts said Wednesday’s announcement helped soothe some nervous.
“The lowering of additional borrowing requirement for the current fiscal year to Rs 200 billion from Rs 500 billion estimated earlier has been welcomed by market participants,” said Dhiraj Relli, managing director and chief executive officer, HDFC Securities.
IT shares, too, extended their gains, with Infosys gaining 2.6 per cent and TCS adding 1.4 per cent. Tech shares are seeing buying interests after decent December quarter earnings and upgrades by brokerages on hopes of higher growth this year. It has taken a mere 16 trading sessions for the Sensex to move from 34,000 to 35,000. HDFC, Infosys, TCS and ICICI Bank have contributed nearly 700 points to the latest 1,000-point gain.
In recent months, shares of companies aligned to the housing and rural economy have also gained on hopes of higher spending by the government.
“Stocks in the housing, infrastructure and ‘rural’ sectors have jumped sharply in the past few months in anticipation of higher government spending and subsequent recovery in volumes, revenues and earnings. However, the government’s ability to spend will depend on its fiscal position. The market’s optimism may be belied if the goods and services tax or GST revenues were to fail to pick up meaningfully from current levels,” Sanjeev Prasad, co-head, Kotak Institutional Equities, said.
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