Sensex Dips 504 Points on Profit Booking; RBI Policy in Focus

Indian stock benchmarks closed lower with the Sensex falling over 500 points, attributed primarily to profit booking following a recent rally. Analysts noted added pressure from weak global cues, including a tech sell-off and US-Iran tensions, which dampened risk sentiment. Market participants are now cautiously awaiting the outcome of the upcoming RBI monetary policy meeting. While the growth outlook remains strong, expectations are for the central bank to maintain a status quo on interest rates.

Key Points: Sensex Falls 504 Pts: Profit Booking, Global Cues Weigh

  • Profit booking after recent rally
  • Global tech sell-off & geopolitical tensions pressure
  • Metals & small-caps underperform
  • Focus shifts to RBI policy meeting
2 min read

Indian stocks settle in red on profit booking; Sensex dips 504 points

Indian stock indices fell with Sensex down 504 points due to profit booking & global pressures. Analysts eye RBI policy meeting outcome.

"Global cues added further pressure... leading to risk-off sentiment. - Vinod Nair"

New Delhi, February 5

Indian stock indices settled lower on Thursday, with analysts attributing the decline to profit booking following the recent uptick after the announcement of the India-US trade deal.

Sensex closed at 83,313.93 points, down 503.76 points, or 0.60 per cent, while Nifty closed at 25,642.80 points, down 133.20 points or 0.52 per cent, respectively.

According to Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Investments Limited, Indian equities saw consolidation, as weakness was followed by a sharp rally in recent sessions driven by optimism around the US-India trade deal.

Nair said possibly profit booking was at play today.

"Global cues added further pressure, with concerns over a broad-based tech sell-off in international markets and heightened US-Iran tensions leading to risk-off sentiment. Metals and small-cap stocks were key underperformers, while broader indices reflected cautious trading," Nair added.

Market participants are now turning their attention to the upcoming RBI policy meeting slated for Friday. "With India's growth outlook remaining strong, consensus expectations point toward a status quo on rates," Nair said.

Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money, a SEBI - registered online trading and wealth tech firm, said Indian equity markets traded in a tight range, signalling a wait-and-watch phase as investors remained cautious in the absence of fresh domestic triggers.

"While overall sentiment remained stable, the benchmarks struggled to sustain momentum at higher levels, reflecting a lack of follow-through buying despite earlier positives," Ponmudi R said.

RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra, after the December MPC meeting, characterised India's current macroeconomic moment as a "rare goldilocks period", that marks high economic growth and exceptionally low inflation.

The monetary policy committee of the RBI had cut the repo rate by 25 basis points to 5.25 per cent, after the three-day review meeting that had concluded in December 5.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As an NRI investor, I see this as a healthy correction. The US-India trade deal optimism was priced in too quickly. Global tensions (US-Iran) are always a wild card. Waiting to see if this dip is a buying opportunity for quality stocks.
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Priya S
Small-cap investors like me are feeling the pinch today 😅 Metals and small-caps took a hit. Hope this is temporary. The "Goldilocks period" comment from RBI is reassuring, but we need stability. Fingers crossed for a neutral RBI policy tomorrow.
V
Vikram M
The lack of fresh domestic triggers is the real issue. Budget is over, results season is winding down. Market needs a new narrative. Profit booking was inevitable. Let's hope the RBI provides some positive guidance to boost sentiment.
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Rohit P
Just 500 points on Sensex? That's barely a dip in today's market! Volatility is the name of the game. The underlying growth story is intact. Use these corrections to accumulate good stocks for your portfolio. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
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Michael C
Respectfully, the article and some comments are downplaying the global risk factors. A broad-based tech selloff internationally and geopolitical tensions are serious headwinds. Indian markets are not completely decoupled. A more cautious tone from analysts would be prudent.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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