Benchmark share indices ended lower on Wednesday, amid weak global cues, as investors booked profits ahead of the September derivative contracts expiry.
On the global front, Chinese shares fell to their lowest level in more than 43 months on Wednesday with the Shanghai Composite barely holding the 2000-points level as investors continue to fret about the health of the world's second largest economy.
Japan's Nikkei average fell 2 per cent on Wednesday, breaking below the key 9,000 mark and hitting a two-week closing low, as a mass of companies went ex-dividend, while concerns over debt-laden Spain dampened sentiment.
European shares fell sharply and the single currency hit a two-week low on Wednesday as popular opposition within the euro zone to budget austerity measures unnerved investors already worried about a weak global growth outlook. CAC, DAX and FTSE have plunged between 1-2 per cent.
Back home, the rupee recovered marginally after initial losses today on persistent demand for the American currency from banks and its strengthening in the overseas forex markets.
On the sectoral front, BSE Metal, TECk, PSU and Capital Goods indices declined by almost 1 per cent each. However, defensive sectors like FMCG and Healthcare surged by almost 1 per cent each.
From the Metal space, Hindalco, Tata Steel, Jindal Steel and Sterlite melted between 0.2-2 per cent on weakness in the London Metal Exchange.
L&T and BHEL slumped between 0.3-1 per cent on account of profit booking after sharp gains recently.
Banking and financial shares like HDFC Bank, HDFC and ICICI Bank slipped between 0.3-2
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