BENGALURU: Indian shares rose to log their fourth consecutive weekly gain on Friday, after a softer-than-expected US jobs report coupled with declining oil prices eased near-term Federal Reserve rate-hike concerns.
The easing came as a relief to India’s IT sector, a heavyweight on the benchmarks, which has taken a battering of late on AI-disruption fears and prospects of higher rates that typically subdue US client spending.
A gauge tracking the sector climbed 1.8percent on Friday and snapped a five-week losing streak with a 0.4percent gain. The benchmark Sensex gained 0.34percent to 77,763.91 on Friday, while the Nifty 50 rose 0.39percent to 24,270.85. The Sensex and Nifty rose about 0.9percent this week, extending their four-week gains to 4.7percent and 3.9percent, helped by lower oil and steps to support both the rupee and foreign inflows.
“The Reserve Bank of India’s recent measures have bought Indian markets some breathing room, helping steady the currency and draw in foreign inflows at a time when the balance of payments is under pressure,” said Sat Duhra, portfolio manager at the Asia ex-Japan equity team, Janus Henderson Investors.
Brent crude hovered at about USD72 a barrel, about 43percent down from its Iran-war peak. “The Indian market still needs a strong earnings pulse (for further upmove),” Duhra said. June-quarter earnings, starting next week, are expected to show the war’s full toll on corporate profitability.
Eleven of the 16 major sectors logged weekly gains. The broader small-caps and mid-caps added 2.1percent and 0.6percent, respectively. Pharma stocks gained 3.1percent, supported by buying in the sector seen as relatively shielded from crude and weak monsoon risks. Bucking the trend, Eicher Motors fell 3.4percent this week, after brokerages flagged the Royal Enfield maker as most exposed to Delhi’s new EV policy.






















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