A benchmark index of Indian equities markets Wednesday surged 321.07 points or 1.27 percent a day after the Reserve Bank of India relaxed lending norms to long-gestation infrastructure projects.
The rally was led by bank, metal, capital goods, automobile and oil and gas stocks.
The 30-scrip Sensitive Index (Sensex) of the S&P Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), which opened at 25,322.17 points, closed trade at 25,549.72 points, up 321.07 points or 1.27 percent from the previous day's close at 25,228.65 points.
The Sensex touched a high of 25,602.78 points and a low of 25,246.75 points in the intra-trade.
On Tuesday, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) issued latest guidelines exempting banks from having a reserve ratio requirement to raise long-term lending for infrastructure projects.
"If banks finance such long-term loans with short-term deposits, they create a risky asset liability mismatch, as well as a need to maintain liquid assets to mitigate the risk of illiquidity," the RBI said Tuesday.
"Banks would be better off if they could issue long-term bonds to finance such loans, but regulatory pre-emptions may make such issuance costly."
The S&P BSE bankex gained 426.10 points, metal index moved up by 280.32 points, capital goods index rose 233.45 points, automobile index surged 222.85 points and oil and gas index closed higher by 132.05.
The wider 50-scrip Nifty of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) closed 97.75 points or 1.30 percent up at 7,624.40 points.
The major Sensex gainers were: ICICI Bank, up 4.70 percent at Rs.1,459.05; Hindalco Inds, up 4.19 percent at Rs.181.65; Axis Bank, up 3.57 percent at Rs.1,965.25; Tata Steel, 3.13 percent at Rs.542.70; and Sesa Sterlite, up 2.97 percent at Rs.296.65.
The losers were: Gail India, down 0.96 percent at Rs.457.10; Bajaj Auto, down 0.85 percent at Rs.2,140.25; Wipro, down 0.34 percent at Rs.535.45; Cipla, down 0.27 percent at Rs.431.80; and HDFC, down 0.15 percent at Rs.975.90.
Among the Asian markets, Japan's Nikkei closed 0.10 percent down while Hong Kong's Heng Seng ended 0.27 percent higher. China's Shanghai Composite Index went 0.15 percent down.
In Europe, London's FTSE 100 was up 1.03 percent, the French CAC 40 was lower by 1.47 percent and Germany's DAX Index had lost 1.41 percent at the closing bell here.
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