By Abhishek Vishnoi
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The BSE Sensex rose on Monday to its highest close in nearly a month as stocks of companies such as Tata Steel gained after promising manufacturing data at home and in China eased concerns about slowing economic growth.
An HSBC survey showed on Monday that manufacturing returned to growth last month as a strong rise in orders pushed factories to step up production.
The report came after data on Friday showed India's economy grew more than expected in the July-September quarter, sparking hopes that economic growth may have bottomed.
Traders say the U.S. nonfarm payrolls data on Friday and the outcome of elections in several states on December 8 would be key for the short term.
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"The Street fears that if the data comes as per expectations, the Fed will signal an unwinding of its $85 billion bond-buying programme, which boosted the global markets so far," said Jyotheesh Kumar, executive vice-president of HDFC Securities.
The outcome of state elections would also be important to validate traders' expectations of a clear winner, Kumar added.
The Sensex rose 0.51 percent, or 106.08 points, to end at 20,898.01, marking its highest close since November 5.
The Nifty rose 0.68 percent, or 41.75 points, to end at 6,217.85, marking its third consecutive day of gains. It closed above the psychologically important 6,200 level.
Steel shares gained, with Tata Steel
Financial shares gained, with IDFC
Axis Bank
Larsen and Toubro
Indian Oil Corp
Hindustan Petroleum Corp
Among stocks that fell, Power Grid Corp of India
(Editing by Prateek Chatterjee)


