Advancers
Pharma stocks were among the few gainers. Ranbaxy Laboratories led the advancers, up 3.% to Rs 338, as 3.32 lakh shares were traded on BSE. Dr Reddy Labs gained 1.8% to Rs 694. BHEL was up 1.2% at Rs 2,280. Reliance Energy advanced 1.8% to Rs 484, and ONGC added 1.5% to Rs 866. Other gainers included ITC, higher 0.6% to Rs 143 and Hindustan Lever, up 0.2% to Rs 198.
Decliners
IT stocks plummeted, as the dollar dipped versus the Rupee to its lowest level since June 1999. Also, a weak consumer confidence report caused concerns about a slowdown in the United States, where these companies generate most of their revenue. TCS slumped 4.8% to Rs 1,201, Satyam Computers shed 3.5% to Rs 456, Infosys lost 3.2% to Rs 1,992 and Wipro declined 4.8% to Rs 558. Of company news, Satyam Computer has signed a five-year contract valued at 200 million dollar with US-based Applied Materials, a global leader in Nanomanufacturing technology for providing application development, maintenance and support services.
Auto large-cap Tata Motors fell heavily, down 4.7% to Rs 719 and Index heavy Reliance Industries declined 1.48% to Rs 1,344.95. Other decliners included HDFC, off 3.5% to Rs 1,519. Larsen & Toubro shed 3% to Rs 1,566. Maruti, Hindalco and Bharti Airtel were down around 2.5% each to Rs 799, Rs 130 and Rs 758, respectively. Maruti lost 2.5% to Rs 798 and Hindalco dipped 2.4% to Rs 130.
Tata Steel lost 0.9% to Rs 438. The private sector steel large-cap has now entered into talks with the second-largest steelmaker in the world, Nippon of Japan for jointly producing an alloy for automakers and other companies.
6:30AM European shares were lower Wednesday on selling pressure.
European markets declined on Wednesday morning. In early trade, Frankfurt Xetra Dax climbed 0.4 % to 6,829.21, the CAC 40 in Paris added 0.4 % to 5,566.23 and London FTSE 100 slipped 0.1 % to 6,288.5. National benchmarks fell in 16 of the 18 markets in western Europe.
Advancers
Oil groups provided the only substantial support to the market after oil prices spiked briefly above $66 a barrel. Finnish refiner Neste Oil gained 2.3%, France Total rose 1%, while Britain BP added 1% and Royal Dutch Shell, Europe biggest oil company, gained 1.7%.
Decliners
BHP Billiton, the world biggest mining company, dropped 0.8% and Rio Tinto Group slipped 2%. SAP, the world largest maker of business-management software, fell 1.2% and Ericsson AB, the biggest producer of wireless-network equipment, lost 0.8%. Siemens AG, Europe largest engineering company, lost 1.6%.
Airlines were also lower as oil accounts for 30% of airlines costs. Shares of Air France lost 1.3%. British Airways, Europe third-biggest airline, retreated 0.9%. UPM-Kymmene led the Finnish paper and forestry groups lower, down 4.1%, after reports that an early spring in Finland could cause problems accessing raw materials in remote areas.
Oil and gold
Oil gained for a seventh day in New York on concern a dispute over detention of British servicemen by Iran will escalate. Crude oil for May delivery gained as much as $1.53, or 2.4%, to $64.46 a barrel in electronic after-hours trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude for May settlement rose as much as $1.53, or 2.4%, to $66.13 a barrel in electronic trading on the London-based ICE Futures exchange.
Gold advanced to a three-week high as speculation the U.K. may raise diplomatic pressure on Iran over the seizure of its servicemen. Gold for immediate delivery climbed $1.29, or 0.2%, to $665.70 an ounce in early trade in London. Silver climbed 6.5 cents to $13.34 an ounce, after falling 0.8% yesterday. Platinum gained $8.50 to $1,243.50 an ounce and palladium rose $1 to $353.50.
Currencies
The U.S. dollar traded mixed against other major currencies in European trading Wednesday morning. The euro traded at $1.3340, down from $1.3344 Tuesday in New York. The British pound traded at $1.9624, down from $1.9656. The dollar fetched 117.40 Japanese yen, down from 117.95
5:00AM Copper, gold declined Tuesday, while energy stocks gained.
The most-active May copper declined 8.10 cents to settle at $3.0575 per pound on the New York Mercantile Exchange. April gold shed $1.40 to finish at $662.50 a troy ounce, while May silver lost 13 cents to $13.28 an ounce. June palladium was off $3 to $356 an ounce, but April platinum rose $5.50 to $1,242 an ounce.
The May crude oil contract gained 2 cents to finish at $62.93 a barrel. April RBOB gasoline advanced 0.53 cent to $2.0730 a gallon after hitting a new seven-month, intraday high of $2.0850 a gallon. April heating oil futures ended up 1.03 cent at $1.7864 a gallon and April natural gas futures gained 24.9 cents, or 3.4%, to settle at $7.503 a million British thermal units, the highest close since Feb. 27. Natural gas futures were boosted by a weather forecast of stronger hurricanes this year in the Gulf of Mexico, which could pose a risk to production in the region.
Arabica coffee futures also dropped. May coffee closed 1.9 cent lower at 1.1245 a pound, while July finished 1.9 cent weaker at $1.1525 a pound. Futures on raw sugar in foreign ports settled higher though, with May sugar closing 0.11 cent higher at 10.11 cents a pound, and July sugar finishing 0.12 cent stronger at 10.17 cents a pound. |