IANS | 22 Sep, 2023
On weekly charts, Nifty fell 2.57 per cent, the sharpest fall since
the week ended Feb 20, 2023, says Deepak Jasani, Head of Retail
Research, HDFC Securities.
Nifty fell on September 22 but showed
signs of near term bottom formation. A fall below 19645 could take the
Nifty to 19460-19480 band while on rises, Nifty could face resistance at
19849 for the near term.
Nifty declined to end lower on Friday
for the fourth consecutive day after swinging between gains and losses.
At close, Nifty was down 0.34 per cent or 68.1 points at 19674.3, he
said.
Global shares sagged and U.S. yields climbed multi-year
highs on Friday after a week packed with central bank meetings signalled
that the U.S. Federal Reserve's interest rates would stay higher for
longer. The mounting risk of a U.S. government shutdown in just 10 days
was also being watched by markets, he said.
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) on Friday stuck to an ultra-easy monetary policy and made no changes to its outlook.
Equity funds globally had outflows of $16.9 billion in the week through September 20, according to EPFR Global data, he added.
Vaibhav
Vidwani, Research Analyst, Bonanza Portfolio said most of the sectoral
indices were in red where Nifty PSU Bank outperform today with the gains
of 3.51per cent. India will be included in JPMorgan's Global Bond
Index-Emerging Markets (EMs) commencing June 28, 2024, with India's
weight in the index limited to a maximum of 10 per cent and qualifying
government bonds valued at $330 billion.
Power Grid, Asian Paints,
Coal India, NTPC, HDFC Life were the top Nifty gainers whereasHDFC Bk,
UltraTech, DRL, Wipro were the biggest laggards, he said.