Indian shares snap seven day winning streak

21 Feb, 2015

Indian shares fell on Friday to snap a seven-day winning streak, weighed down by a 3.2 percent decline in Reliance Industries and as sentiment for bluechips was hit after foreign investors sold index derivatives. The benchmark BSE index fell 0.78 percent for the day, while it gained 0.47 percent for the week. The broader NSE index ended 0.69 percent lower but marked a weekly gain of 0.32 percent.
Reliance Industries Ltd fell as much as 3.4 percent after Indian police arrested seven people, including government employees and a former journalist, whom they said ran a scam to steal official documents from India's oil ministry and sell them to energy consultants and large private companies. Police did not provide any names, but an official at Reliance said it had learned one of its officials had been detained in connection with the case. The official said the company was unaware of any other details and it was conducting an internal investigation.
Reliance shares fell 3.1 percent and were the biggest drag on indexes. Still, analysts said they expected shares to turn firmer next week ahead of the fiscal 2015/16 budget to be unveiled on February 28 and as Indian metal and cement companies bid aggressively for coal blocks in the country's first auctions to sell mines, raising hopes about the fiscal deficit. "In the near term, market would get a boost due to auction money," said Deven Choksey, managing director of K R Choksey Securities.
Bluechips such as ICICI Bank declined after overseas funds sold index derivatives worth $132.75 million on Thursday, according to NSE data. ICICI Bank lost 1.7 percent, while Housing Development and Finance Corp fell 1 percent. Software services exporters fell on lingering concerns about waning overseas interest in the sector. A report by Bank of America-Merrill Lynch showed some of the IT companies were among the top-10 underweight stocks for foreign institutional investors. Among IT stocks, Infosys fell 1.6 percent and Wipro lost 1.5 percent.

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