Indian shares set to open higher; TCS in focus after revenue beat
- GIFT Nifty futures were trading at 24,117.5
Indian shares are set to open higher, driven by strong IT earnings from TCS, easing oil prices, and positive Asian market trends, despite lingering Middle East geopolitical concerns.
- Tata Consultancy Services' better-than-expected quarterly revenue.
- Lingering geopolitical risks in the Middle East.
- Foreign and domestic institutional investor trading patterns.
Indian shares were set to open higher on Friday, likely led by IT stocks after Tata Consultancy Services reported quarterly revenue above estimates, while easing oil prices and firmer Asian markets were also expected to support investor sentiment.
GIFT Nifty futures were trading at 24,117.5 as of 8:03 a.m. IST, indicating the Nifty 50 could open above Thursday’s close of 23,962.80.
IT stocks will be in focus after Tata Consultancy Services, India’s top software services exporter, beat June-quarter revenue expectations, helped by stronger spending from banking clients and a weaker rupee.
CEO K. Krithivasan said on a post-earnings call that he was “optimistic” about a turnaround in technology spending by manufacturing and life sciences clients in the September quarter, while a recovery in the consumer business would depend on geopolitics.
Both the Nifty and the BSE Sensex rose about 0.3% on Thursday after a 2% slide on Wednesday, as investors assessed the potential impact of the escalating Middle East conflict.
Foreign portfolio investors snapped a buying streak, with outflows of 5.33 billion rupees ($55.88 million) on Thursday, according to provisional data from the NSE.
Domestic institutional investors remained net buyers, purchasing shares worth 20.58 billion rupees.
Other Asian markets rose on Friday, led by chip and AI firms, tracking an uptick in technology shares on Wall Street overnight.
Brent crude traded little changed near $76 a barrel after falling 2.2% in the previous session.
The latest Middle East flare-up has kept investors cautious, though sentiment improved after a U.S. official said on Thursday that Washington remained committed to a resolution with Iran and that technical talks were continuing.























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