Business
Global relief wave lifts Indian markets, but FIIs stay cautious
The rupee strengthened and government bond yields eased. Gold and silver rose. The two-week pause in West Asia hostilities, which paves the way for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, sent oil prices tumbling 15%, easing concerns that higher energy prices could stoke inflation and derail growth.
The NSE Nifty ended at 23,997.35, up 3.8% or 873.70 points over the previous day. The BSE Sensex finished at 77,562.90, up 4% or 2,946.32 points. The surge – the biggest upmove in a day by the Sensex since February 2021 and since May 2025 for the Nifty – was partly driven by liquidation of bearish bets.
Adding ₹16 Lakh Crore to Mcap
These had weighed down the market since the start of the war February 28, dragging it into the oversold zone.
“The ceasefire has come as a relief to investors as it rekindled hopes of the war coming to an end sooner, and drove them to cut bearish positions,” said A Balasubramanian, MD and CEO, Aditya Birla Sun Life AMC. “Although this is a step in the right direction, investor confidence is likely to be bolstered once a formal agreement is reached between the sparring nations.”
Wednesday’s gains added ₹16.1 lakh crore to the market cap of BSE-listed companies.
The ceasefire was announced early Wednesday morning India time. Still, foreign portfolio investors remained net sellers, pulling out a net ₹2,811.97 crore from Indian equities. That took their total sales tally for April to ₹48,317 crore. Domestic institutions brought to the tune of ₹4,168.17 crore.
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