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This article was first published 12 years ago

Bears take charge as key support levels break

Last updated on: May 7, 2012 09:11 IST

Image: Bull and bear statues are pictured outside Frankfurt's stock exchange.
Photographs: Alex Domanski/Reuters Mehul Shah in Mumbai

A
fter closing below key technical support levels, India's benchmark equity indices are likely to come under further pressure this week as investors await clarity on the general anti-avoidance rule (GAAR) and factory output data for March.

Investors will also closely track the rupee's movement against the US dollar as well as outcome of election results in France and Greece on Monday.

Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee is expected to clarify on tax-related issues on account of GAAR, a major concern among foreign investors, on Monday, when the Finance Bill is likely to be tabled in the Lok Sabha.

Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have invested just about Rs 983 crore (Rs 9.83 billion) in Indian shares since Mukhejee proposed GAAR in his Budget on March 16, Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) data compiled by BS Research Bureau showed.

Before that, they had net bought shares worth about Rs 42,822 crore (Rs 428.22 billion) between January 1 and March 15.

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Bears take charge as key support levels break


Photographs: Reuters

Factory output data for March, to be released on Friday, will give an indication about the extent of slowdown in economic growth.

"Negative macroeconomic environment, falling rupee and slowdown in foreign flows are making the market jittery," said Motilal Oswal, CMD, Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

The Indian currency, which last closed at 53.48 against the greenback on Friday, has lost 9.83 per cent from its recent highs of 48.69 on February 3.

Key stock market indices - Sensex and Nifty - lost over two per cent each last week. The Sensex closed at 16,831.08 on Friday, while the Nifty ended at 5,086.85. Not just that, both these indices have closed below their 200-day moving averages (DMAs), considered an important technical level. This, technical experts say, makes these indices vulnerable to further correction.

"Sharp breakdown of Nifty after moving in a consolidation for two-three months is considered as a possible beginning of a down trended move," said Nagaraj Shetti, technical analyst, HDFC Securities, in a note to clients. "This decline could extend up to 4,750 levels in the next one or two months as per the indications of daily/weekly patterns."

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Bears take charge as key support levels break

Image: Pedestrians walk past the New York Stock Exchange.
Photographs: Joshua Lott/Reuters

Globally too, things are not looking very encouraging. Major US and European stock indices fell more than one per cent on Friday after a weak US jobs report and data that showed a deeper recession across the euro zone than previously thought.

Just 115,000 workers were added to payrolls in the US last month, 55,000 less than economists expected, according to Reuters. Markit's Eurozone Services PMI, which gauges business activity over a month, came in at 46.9 for April, sharply lower than 49.2 in March. A reading below 50 signifies contraction.

Among the major global events, implications of French and Greek elections for the region's drive to impose fiscal austerity will be crucial, while March readings on industrial production in Spain, Germany, Italy and France will also highlight the challenges facing the region, according to a Reuters report.

In China, data on inflation, retail and factory output, due on Thursday and Friday, is likely to add to confidence that growth is bottoming and inflation is benign.

Source: source