India's benchmark BSE index rose on Thursday to a record closing high as state-run lenders such as State Bank of India rallied on hopes of stabilising asset quality and attractive valuations. The BSE index gained 9.2 percent in October, its biggest monthly gain since January 2012 on strong foreign inflows as a delay in the US Federal Reserve's tapering of monetary stimulus led to a surge of money in risk assets.
Overseas investors were net buyers for a 19th consecutive session on Wednesday, bringing their total buying to nearly 160 billion rupees ($2.61 billion) during that period.
The BSE index rose to an intraday high of 21,205.44, just short of the all-time high of 21,206.77 seen in January 2008.
The index has now gained 21.3 percent since it hit an intraday yearly low of 17,448.71 on August 28. "We are seeing strong support from institutional investors. Markets can go up to another 100 points (in Nifty). Going forward, there could be profit-taking after Diwali," said Suresh Parmar, head of institutional equities at KJMC Capital Markets.
"Stock and sector specific rally could continue, especially in IT stocks," he added.
The benchmark BSE index rose 0.62 percent, or 130.55 points, to close at 21,164.52.
The broader NSE index rose 0.76 percent, or 47.45 points, to end at 6,299.15.
The rally was led by state lenders including State Bank of India which closed 4.4 percent higher, while Bank of India rose 21.47 percent, Bank of Baroda was up 10.61 percent and Canara Bank gained 10.79 percent.
Among other stocks, Tata Steel gained 2.54 percent, Reliance Industries rose 1.84 percent and ICICI Bank 2 percent.
However, shares of pharmaceutical companies fell on profit taking. Dr Reddy's Laboratories was down 2.65 percent, Sun Pharmaceutical Industries lost 1.57 percent and Cipla Ltd fell 1.48 percent.
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