At the end of the day, there was barely any movement in both Sensex and Nifty compared to their previous close, but the bias turned negative.
The restraint on part of investors was chiefly because of RBI's minutes of its December policy meeting, which showed that some members were concerned about rising oil prices, its inflationary impact and possibility of fiscal slippage.
"Market showed signs of consolidation due to lack of fresh triggers to cross the next resistance while RBI's cautious view on slow pace in economic recovery and inflation impacted sentiment. Construction companies rallied owing to expectation of improvement in execution in H2 FY18 and growth in order booking led by the government's programme to boost infrastructure growth," said Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Financial Services.
The gauge had lost 59 points in the previous session.
The NSE Nifty treaded water at 10,440.30, easing only 3.90 points, or 0.04 per cent.
Indian bond prices fell to their lowest in nearly 1-1/2 years on the RBI minutes. The rupee's weakness against the dollar weighed heavy, too.
Participants were not in a mood to go for big bets in view of the approaching Christmas and the year-end.
The Bank of Japan kept monetary policy steady despite growing signs of strength in the economy.
While foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) net sold shares worth Rs 1,505.04 crore yesterday, domestic institutional investors (DIIs) bought equities to the tune of Rs 146.17 crore.
M&M hit a bump, losing the most by 3.74 per cent.
Maruti Suzuki, HUL, Bajaj Auto and Axis Bank slumped by up to 1.11 per cent.
Reliance Infrastructure dropped as much as 8.12 per cent after the company signed an agreement to sell its Mumbai power business to Adani Transmission for a total consideration of Rs 18,800 crore.
Shares of companies linked to the 2G spectrum case surged up to 20 per cent today after a special court acquitted all the accused. D B Realty surged 19.89 per cent, Unitech 11.86 per cent, Reliance Communications 4.05 per cent and Sun TV Network 4.51 per cent on the BSE.
Auto index dropped, along with banking, FMCG, oil & gas.
Investors were seen shifting their focus towards broader markets as small-cap and mid-cap indices saw a record high, with a gain of 1.11 per cent and 0.77 per cent, respectively.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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