Las acciones indias caen bruscamente en medio de una venta masiva de tecnología global

Los mercados bursátiles indios registraron su mayor caída en un solo día en casi un mes. El descenso siguió a una venta masiva mundial de acciones tecnológicas y a la preocupación por posibles movimientos en los tipos de interés de Estados Unidos.

Tanto el Nifty 50 como el BSE Sensex retrocedieron notablemente durante la sesión. Un dólar estadounidense más fuerte y la toma de beneficios tras las ganancias anteriores añadieron presión a los índices de referencia. La mayoría de los sectores registraron pérdidas, siendo las acciones de metales y tecnología de la información las de peor desempeño. Por el contrario, los sectores farmacéutico y sanitario se mantuvieron mejor que el mercado en general. Los volúmenes de negociación y la volatilidad aumentaron a medida que avanzaba la sesión. Los participantes del mercado están ahora supervisando los niveles de soporte clave para determinar la tendencia futura.

Artículos relacionados

BSE trading floor during Sensex and Nifty rally on US-Iran ceasefire relief, with cheering traders amid rising indices and cautious expressions over fragile peace.
Imagen generada por IA

Indian markets rally on US-Iran ceasefire relief but caution persists

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

Indian equity benchmarks Sensex and Nifty posted their strongest single-day gains in years on Wednesday, driven by a US-Iran ceasefire that eased oil prices and inflation fears. The market capitalization of BSE-listed companies rose by ₹16.1 lakh crore. However, Asian stocks turned cautious as the ceasefire showed signs of fragility.

Dalal Street saw a notable decline with the Indian rupee hitting a record low for the second consecutive day. Key equity indices posted their largest single-day drop in six weeks.

Reportado por IA

Indian stock markets experienced a significant downturn on Friday. The decline was driven by geopolitical tensions between the US and Iran along with a weakening rupee.

Indian stock indices surged more than 1% on Monday, recovering from early losses. The rebound was fueled by a proposed ceasefire in West Asia and stable crude oil prices. The Nifty closed at 22,968.25, while the Sensex ended at 74,106.85.

Reportado por IA

Foreign portfolio investors pulled out a record Rs 1.18 lakh crore in March, driving the Sensex down 2.22% to 71,947.55 and Nifty 2.14% to 22,331.40 on Monday. The rupee breached 95 intra-day before closing at 94.83 against the dollar. Elevated crude prices above $100 per barrel due to the West Asia conflict added pressure.

Indian IT stocks fell sharply on Wednesday following HCL Technologies' disappointing fourth-quarter earnings and cautious outlook. The Nifty IT index suffered a substantial drop amid renewed investor worries over artificial intelligence disruption. Major firms including Infosys, TCS and Tech Mahindra also declined.

Reportado por IA

Asian stock markets fell sharply as the artificial intelligence driven rally lost momentum. South Korea's KOSPI index halted trading after a steep decline. Investors focused on possible Federal Reserve interest rate increases and fresh inflation figures.

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar