For the week, the Sensex lost 257.62 points, or 0.96 per cent, and the NSE Nifty 122.30 points, or 1.48 per cent. The weekly decline is the biggest since November 18, when the Sensex registered a fall of 668.58 points and the Nifty 222.20 points.
The 30-share index settled moderately lower by 29.51 points, or 0.11 per cent, at 26,489.56. It hit the day's high of 26,594.55 and a low of 26,455.21.
Nifty's 50-share NSE fell 14.15 points, or 0.17 per cent, to 8,139.45 at the close. Intra-day, it moved between 8,178.70 and 8,127.45.
With Parliament's Winter Session a washout and a consensus eluding on the GST front, stocks moved without any clear domestic support and focus now shifts to the Union Budget.
The dollar soared to a near 14-year high against the euro overseas, which quickened the capital flight.
"The market is taking time to shake off the aggressive outlook of Fed. India is likely to underperform in the near term as the strengthening dollar and the rising oil price will add pressure to an already disrupted market," said Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit BNP Paribas Financial Services.
Bharti Airtel fell the most in the Sensex group by dropping 2.67 per cent followed by ONGC (2.30 per cent).
Aurobindo Pharma dropped 0.55 per cent following news reports that 20 US states have filed a lawsuit against the company alleging price manipulation of two drugs.
Others such as Adani Ports, ICICI Bank, ITC, Hero MotoCorp, Tata Steel, Axis Bank, Wipro, Coal India, Lupin, Bajaj Auto, GAIL, NTPC and Dr Reddy's too retreated.
Broader markets too remained lacklustre, with small-cap and mid-cap indices ending lower by 0.25 per and 0.04 per cent, respectively.
Foreign funds net sold shares worth Rs 611.97 crore yesterday, showed provisional data.
Other Asian shares closed mixed. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.18 per cent while Japan's Nikkei surged 0.66 per cent and Shanghai Composite rose 0.17 per cent.
But Tata Motors, Cipla, Infosys and TCS were among a few
notable gainers.
The market breadth turned negative as 1,490 stocks ended lower, 1,121 closed higher, while 164 ruled stable.
The total turnover on BSE read Rs 3,140.33 crore, higher than Rs 2,582.33 crore registered during the previous trading session.
"Benchmark indices in India continue to consolidate and trade sideways as markets digest a host of recent developments," said Karthikraj Lakshmanan, Senior Fund Manager, Equities, BNP Paribas Mutual Fund.
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