Key Points

Indian stock markets showed resilience on Friday, with Sensex and Nifty closing in the green despite weekly losses. Foreign portfolio investor outflows and uncertainty surrounding the US trade tariff deadline have created a cautious investment environment. Sectoral indices displayed mixed performance, with FMCG and IT sectors showing strength. Analysts suggest that market movement remains dependent on Q1 earnings and potential trade deal developments.

Key Points: Indian Stocks Rise Friday Despite Weekly FPI Outflow Concerns

  • Sensex closes 0.23% higher after multiple sessions of losses
  • Nifty recovers with 55.70 points gain
  • FPI outflows continue to challenge market sentiment
  • US trade tariff deadline on July 9 creates market uncertainty
3 min read

Indian stocks settle in green on Friday, but log weekly losses amid US trade deal uncertainty

Indian markets close in green amid US trade deal uncertainty, with Sensex and Nifty showing resilience despite foreign investor outflows.

"The market is experiencing a pause as investors adopt a wait-and-watch strategy - Vinod Nair, Geojit Investments"

New Delhi, July 4

Keeping the intraday gains intact, Indian stock indices settled in the green on Friday, despite continued foreign portfolio investor (FPI) outflows.

This marks the first jump in the domestic indices after multiple sessions of losses.

The Sensex closed at 83,432.89 points, up 193.42 points or 0.23 per cent. The Nifty closed at 25,461.00 points, up 55.70 points or 0.22 per cent. Sensex and Nifty on a cumulative basis declined 0.4-0.7 per cent during this week.

Among the sectoral indices, Nifty FMCG, Nifty IT, Nifty media, Nifty pharma, Nifty PSU bank, Nifty realty, Nifty oil and gas were the top movers, while Nifty metal and Nifty auto were the top losers, NSE data showed.

"The Indian market is experiencing a pause as investors adopt a wait-and-watch strategy ahead of the impending US tariff deadline, with mixed global cues. Ongoing FII outflows reflect a risk-off approach, while DII inflows are offering partial support," said Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Investments Limited.

"Following the recent rally, main indices are hovering near peak valuation levels, limiting further upside, which is highly dependent on Q1 earnings and details of the trade deal. In the mid- and small-cap space, the market has shifted to being more stock-specific following the recent recovery," Nair added.

Barring Friday, India's stock benchmarks remained in the red this week, which analysts attribute to profit booking by investors.

"After 5 straight sessions of losses, the market remained in a consolidation phase as investors stayed on the sidelines ahead of the July 9 deadline set by U.S. President Donald Trump for trade tariff negotiations," said Sundar Kewat, Technical and Derivatives Analyst, Ashika Institutional Equity - Ashika Stock Broking part of Ashika Group.

Analysts earlier opined uncertainties around extension in Trump reciprocal tariffs beyond July 9, and an India-US bilateral trade agreement weighed on the Indian stock indices this week.

Last week, Indian stock indices stayed in the green for the fourth straight session, lending support from positive global cues, relative peace on the Israel-Iran conflict front, and hopes of a possible extension of the July 9 tariff deadline by the US administration.

At a broader level, India's strong domestic fundamentals, a responsive RBI, and good monsoon conditions have been supporting the financial markets. US markets are hitting all-time highs, and the US dollar is weakening; as a result, emerging markets like India are benefiting. A comfortable inflation number in India is another positive.

In 2024, Sensex and Nifty accumulated a growth of about 9-10 per cent each. In 2023, Sensex and Nifty gained 16-17 per cent, on a cumulative basis. In 2022, they gained a mere 3 per cent each.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As an NRI investor, I'm concerned about these FPI outflows. The Indian market fundamentals are strong but global uncertainties are creating unnecessary volatility. RBI should consider more measures to stabilize the rupee.
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Ananya R
Small investors like me are suffering the most in this volatility 😔 Bought some IT stocks last month and now seeing losses. Experts say hold but it's difficult when savings are at stake.
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Vikram M
Good to see FMCG and pharma doing well - these are defensive sectors that show our domestic consumption story remains strong despite global headwinds. Long term investors should focus on these sectors.
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Karthik V
The article mentions good monsoon - this is the real game changer for Indian economy! Rural demand will pick up and benefit many sectors. Market may be volatile now but fundamentals are solid.
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Priya S
While the analysis is good, I wish financial journalists would explain these market movements in simpler terms for common people. Not everyone understands terms like 'FPI outflows' or 'risk-off approach'.

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

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