Indian stock markets ended lower amid a volatile trading session Friday, snapping two-day gains, on rising concerns that India's growth is likely to be lower than the central bank's revised forecast of 7.6% for 2011-12.
The 30-share Sensex ended at 15,739 down 75 points or 0.5% and the 50-share Nifty ended at 4,714 down 20 points or 0.4%.
The Reserve Bank of India governor Thursday said that India's GDP will be below 7.6%.
In its second quarter review of monetary policy 2011-12 the central bank had revised the baseline projection of GDP growth for 2011-12 downwards to 7.6% from 8% earlier.
Meanwhile, brokerage CLSA cut its forecast for Indian GDP growth to 6.7% for the current fiscal year ending March from its earlier projection of 7.3%, citing cyclical deceleration caused by high interest rates, policy inertia and the adverse impact of global headwinds.
On the global front, US markets ended 1% higher yesterday after stronger than expected jobless claims. European markets like France's CAC, Germany's DAX and Britain's FTSE were up 0.5-1% while Asian markets closed 1-2%.
Back home, NTPC topped the selling list among largecaps, sloping down 3.27% to Rs 158.
Bank shares ended lower on profit booking after the central bank's financial stability report Thursday said that the slowing domestic demand and strong global headwinds may further increase loan defaults and funding costs of the banking sector. HDFC Bank lost 1.2%, SBI ended 0.7% down while ICICI Bank closed 1.2% lower.
Index heavyweight Reliance Industries submerged 1% to Rs 746. ONGC too dropped by nearly 1%.
Telecom shares too witnessed selling pressure on reports that the telecom ministry has asked service providers to discontinue their 3G roaming agreements, which will lead
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