By Abhishek Vishnoi
MUMBAI (Reuters) - The BSE Sensex rose 137 points on Tuesday as lenders recovered from recent steep falls after the RBI's move to purchase bonds eased concerns about the value of the sector's debt holdings.
The markets were also buoyed by a top government official's statement that India will finance its current account deficit fully in the fiscal year ending March without drawing down on its reserves, and will also contain the fiscal deficit at 4.8 percent of GDP.
Gains also tracked a rise in global shares as investors tended to view the U.S. shutdown as temporary, and also as something that may further delay the Federal Reserve's plans to start closing downs its monetary stimulus.
However, outlook remains cautious for October as traders approach what is expected to be a weak earnings season with Infosys Ltd's
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"Market may remain sideways for sometime but it will correct further post earnings season as earnings would witness only single-digit growth for the goneby quarter with the second half being particularly bad," said Deven Choksey, managing director, K R Choksey Securities.
The Sensex rose 0.71 percent, or 137.38 points, to end at 19,517.15.
The broader Nifty advanced 0.78 percent, or 44.75 points, to end at 5,780.05.
Banking stocks rose after the RBI said it would buy up to 100 billion rupees of bonds via open market operations on October 7, sparking gains in bonds.
Lenders are the biggest holders of government bonds and the Reserve Bank of India's rate hike last month had raised concerns about the holdings.
ICICI Bank
Among state-owned banks, State Bank of India rose 1.8 percent, while Bank of India
Tata Communications
Maruti Suzuki
TVS Motor Company
Financial Technologies (India)
However among stocks that fell, Hindustan Unilever
Apollo Tyres
(Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)


