Asian Paints
2462.8 22.50
Cipla
1239.1 8.60
Eicher Motors
7137.5 6.50
Nestle India
1269.4 12.00
Grasim Inds
2725.4 8.10
Hindalco Inds.
1029.35 -10.55
Hind. Unilever
2220.9 81.80
ITC
308.2 4.80
Trent
4150.7 67.40
Larsen & Toubro
4114.6 -5.20
M & M
3227.4 5.10
Reliance Industries
1350.7 7.40
Tata Consumer
1123 20.40
Tata Motors PVeh
358.25 1.95
Tata Steel
210.67 -0.02
Wipro
204.71 -5.55
Apollo Hospitals
7627.5 74.50
Dr Reddy's Labs
1221.4 0.00
Titan Company
4365.6 -95.80
SBI
1069.4 2.25
Shriram Finance
1026.3 3.55
Bharat Electron
457.3 1.65
Kotak Mah. Bank
382.65 3.50
Infosys
1318 -1.20
Bajaj Finance
906.65 0.75
Adani Enterp.
2210.5 6.80
Sun Pharma.Inds.
1687.5 -5.60
JSW Steel
1218.7 3.80
HDFC Bank
799.85 4.40
TCS
2577.5 0.60
ICICI Bank
1338.7 -6.80
Power Grid Corpn
314.8 2.55
Maruti Suzuki
13567 232.00
Axis Bank
1351.3 1.70
HCL Technologies
1433.8 -16.40
O N G C
283.45 0.70
NTPC
390.3 -0.50
Coal India
435.95 3.20
Bharti Airtel
1835.3 -5.30
Tech Mahindra
1507 16.00
Jio Financial
242.37 1.10
Adani Ports
1571.1 21.30
HDFC Life Insur.
611.9 -19.60
SBI Life Insuran
1966 -8.70
Max Healthcare
1000.1 9.45
UltraTech Cem.
11898 72.00
Bajaj Auto
9747 -78.00
Bajaj Finserv
1834.9 5.00
Interglobe Aviat
4614 5.30
Eternal
251.49 -1.21
GIFT Nifty:
The GIFT Nifty April 2026 futures currently traded 2.00 points lower, suggesting a muted opening for the benchmark index today.
Institutional Flows:
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold shares worth Rs 1,983.18 crore, while domestic institutional investors (DIIs) were net buyers to the tune of Rs 2,432.30 crore in the Indian equity market on 13 April 2026, provisional data showed.
The FIIs had sold shares worth Rs 40,955.81 crore in April (till 13 April 2026). This follows their cash sales of Rs 122,540.41 crore in March, Rs 6,640.78 crore in February and Rs 41,435.22 crore in January 2026.
Global Markets:
Asia-Pacific markets opened higher Wednesday, tracking overnight gains in U.S. stocks, as oil prices fell amid rising hopes of a diplomatic solution to the Middle East conflict.
Media reports suggested that a second round of negotiations between Washington and Tehran was under discussion. Nothing has been officially scheduled yet, the reports added.
'We've been called by the other side,' President Donald Trump said Monday. 'They'd like to make a deal very badly, he added.
Meanwhile, China's finance ministry has reportedly said it will issue 15.5 billion yuan-denominated treasury bonds in Hong Kong on April 22.
Overnight on Wall Street, stocks rose on Tuesday following a strong session in which traders shrugged off a breakdown in peace talks between the U.S. and Iran, yet were optimistic that a deal between the two countries was still possible.
The S&P 500 gained 1.18% and closed at 6,967.38. The broad market index now stands less than 1% below its 52-week high. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 317.74 points, or 0.66%, to close at 48,535.99. The Nasdaq Composite advanced 1.96% and ended at 23,639.08.
Also helping sentiment was the release of March's producer price index reading. The index recorded a rise in March, but the rise was considerably less than expected as the Iran war's push on energy prices rekindled fears of another inflation burst.
The producer price index, a gauge of pipeline costs for final demand goods and services, increased a seasonally adjusted 0.5% for the month, well below the widely reported estimate for 1.1%, according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report Tuesday.
Domestic Market:
Domestic equity markets slumped on Monday, with benchmark indices witnessing a broad-based selloff amid escalating geopolitical tensions and a sharp surge in crude oil prices. The decline followed rising tensions between the United States and Iran after US President Donald Trump announced a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for global oil supplies. Iran's warning of strong retaliation further heightened fears of a prolonged conflict.
Crude oil prices rallied sharply, with Brent crude crossing the $100 per barrel mark, fuelling inflation concerns and increasing input cost pressures for oil-importing economies such as India. Global cues remained weak, with Dow Jones futures indicating a subdued opening for Wall Street.
The selloff was further aggravated by profit booking after last week's strong rally and continued foreign institutional investor outflows. The Nifty ended below the 23,850 mark, dragged down by losses in auto, energy and FMCG stocks.
The S&P BSE Sensex tanked 702.68 points or 0.91% to 76,847.57. The Nifty 50 index declined 207.95 points or 0.86% to 23,842.65.