The broader consensus was that the Fed would cut the monthly stimulus of $85 billion by $10-15 billion.
After the announcement on Wednesday, US stocks and gold rose and bond yields softened. Gold, trading at around $1,300 an ounce, jumped three per cent.
In India, the yellow metal closed on the MCX at ~29,990 per 10 g in night trade.
It is expected to open two per cent higher on Thursday, as the rupee has gone up sharply on the Dubai-based DGCX.
“Many traders in domestic markets were short in gold and they are likely to get trapped tomorrow when the market opens, as a continuous buying programme internationally could be inflationary,” said Kedia Commodities Director Ajay Kedia.
Brent crude oil also jumped by more than a dollar and was trading at $109.75 a barrel at the time of going to press.
Most investors and analysts were expecting the Fed to cut the QE 3 by at least a small amount.
According to analysts, the market mood would have been optimistic even if the stimulus was lowered by $10 billion a month.
Now that retaining the size of QE 3 has been decided with only one vote against, the sentiment is set to get a great boost.
Also, after the decision, foreign institutional investors are expected to extend their buying spree in Indian stocks. This might also help the rupee stabilise.
Earlier in the day, FIIs had pumped dollars into Indian markets, net-buying shares worth ~580 crore, according to provisional data.
So far this month, these investors have bought to the tune of over Rs 7,000 crore (Rs 70 billion), after selling shares worth about Rs 22,000 crore (Rs 220 billlion) in the preceding three
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