The benchmark Sensex slumped 259 points while the Nifty cracked below the crucial 10,000-mark yesterday as Sebi clamped down on 331 suspected shell companies listed on exchanges.
Investors were spooked after the markets watchdog last night directed bourses to initiate action against the suspected shell companies. These scrips will not be available for trading this month. Brokers said the order raised concerns of more such regulatory action.
A majority of these companies are apparently facing probe for alleged tax evasion and corporate frauds and have been referred by the Income Tax Department and SFIO to the corporate affairs ministry and Sebi for further action.
A number of these firms are from West Bengal. The 30-share Sensex, which lost nearly 52 points in the previous session, resumed higher at 32,341.05 and advanced to 32,354.77 in early trade. But selling pressure emerged as participants digested the Sebi order, which dragged the gauge below the 32,000-mark briefly to a low of 31,915.20. The index finally settled at 32,014.19, a loss of 259.48 points, or 0.80%.
The NSE Nifty dipped below the key 10,000-mark to close 78.55 points, or 0.78% down at 9,978.55 after shuttling between 10,083.80 and 9,947. “The Sebi order has taken industry and investors by surprise.
This has led to erosion of serious wealth and if some of the companies are found to be not shell companies, this order shall still be a death knell for their perception and valuation,” said Rajesh Narain Gupta, Managing Partner, SNG & Partners.
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold shares worth a net Rs199.21 crore, while DIIs bought to the tune of Rs 308.15 crore yesterday, as per provisional data by the exchanges. Dr Reddy’s was the worst performer in the Sensex pack, losing 4.91%.
Other laggards included SBI, ITC, ICICI Bank, NTPC, Power Grid, Axis Bank, ONGC, Maruti Suzuki, Hero MotoCorp, Sun Pharma, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Lupin, Reliance Industries, L&T, HDFC Bank, Infosys, Asian Paints, Wipro, TCS and HDFC, falling up to 2.33%.
Tata Steel emerged as the top gainer by climbing 2.63% after the company returned to profit in the quarter ended 30 June 2017.
In the metal space, Hindustan Aluminium, Nalco, Vedanta, SAIL and NMDC too showed some strength. Among the sectoral indices, realty was the hardest hit, down 4.53%, followed by oil & gas (2.16%), PSU (2.08%), power (1.88%), FMCG (1.50%), bank (1.34%), healthcare (1.32%), capital goods (0.93%), teck (0.65%), IT (0.60%) and auto (0.39%).
Meanwhile the rupee yesterday closed stronger on sales of the US currency by private banks and tracking the dollars’ weakness against the Asian currencies overseas.
The rupee closed at 63.64 a dollar, up 0.28% from its Monday’s close of 63.81. The rupee opened at 63.76 a dollar and touched a high and a low of 63.62 and 63.80 respectively. “Two large private banks were reported selling dollars for their customers,” Bloomberg report said. The 10-year bond yield closed at 6.457%, compared to its previous close of 6.458%. Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions.
So far this year, the rupee gained 6.6% while foreign institutional investors (FIIs) bought $8.71bn and $18.49bn in equity and debt markets, respectively. Asian currencies were trading higher as dollar weakened. China offshore was up 0.29%, China renminbi 0.27%, Philippines peso 0.23%, Japanese yen 0.13%, Singapore dollar 0.13% and Thai baht 0.07%. However, Hong Kong dollar was down 0.05%.