Asian Paints
2486.7 -25.50
Cipla
1503.3 -8.20
Eicher Motors
6930 -93.50
Nestle India
1265 -1.70
Grasim Inds
2882 -17.90
Hindalco Inds.
831.4 -15.80
Hind. Unilever
2445.7 -14.30
ITC
408.9 -5.05
Trent
4660.6 -52.80
Larsen & Toubro
3924.4 -56.10
M & M
3581.2 32.30
Reliance Industr
1473.1 -11.60
Tata Consumer
1179.3 -18.20
Tata Motors PVeh
406.5 -10.50
Tata Steel
179.29 -3.38
Wipro
237.92 -2.58
Apollo Hospitals
7810.5 -14.00
Dr Reddy's Labs
1200 4.00
Titan Company
3813.5 89.00
SBI
957.6 7.90
Shriram Finance
796.5 0.05
Bharat Electron
415.15 -7.15
Kotak Mah. Bank
2096.6 -16.90
Infosys
1467.9 -17.60
Bajaj Finance
1057 13.90
Adani Enterp.
2419.8 -47.20
Sun Pharma.Inds.
1690 -16.40
JSW Steel
1181.4 -13.60
HDFC Bank
985.25 -7.40
TCS
2990.2 -26.60
ICICI Bank
1336.9 -9.50
Power Grid Corpn
279.05 -8.95
Maruti Suzuki
15374 -277.00
Axis Bank
1226.6 -7.10
HCL Technologies
1529.1 -14.40
O N G C
252.35 -5.20
NTPC
330.6 -4.60
Coal India
377.55 -11.00
Bharti Airtel
2113.3 39.30
Tech Mahindra
1409.2 -10.60
Adani Ports
1444.4 -0.30
HDFC Life Insur.
742.45 6.45
SBI Life Insuran
1971.5 1.90
Max Healthcare
1138.4 -7.50
UltraTech Cem.
11819 -131.00
Bajaj Auto
8751 -171.50
Bajaj Finserv
2073.2 -8.40
Interglobe Aviat
5637 -58.50
Eternal Ltd
313.5 -9.10
GIFT Nifty September 2025 futures were trading with a cut of 21.50 points (or 0.08%) in early trade, suggesting a red opening for the Nifty 50 today.
Institutional Flows:
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold shares worth Rs 3,077.59 crore, while domestic institutional investors (DIIs) were net buyers to the tune of Rs 2,469.34 crore in the Indian equity market on 30 October 2025, provisional data showed.
According to public data, FPIs have bought shares worth Rs 4,422.45 crore in the cash market so far in October 2025. This is in contrast with their cash sales of shares worth Rs 35,301.36 crore in September 2025.
Global Markets:
Asia-Pacific markets opened mostly higher on Friday as investors welcomed signs of easing tensions between Washington and Beijing following a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping.
During their high-stakes discussions in South Korea on Thursday, both leaders reached a partial trade agreement, averting a potential escalation in their dispute over rare earth exports ' an issue that had threatened to reignite a full-blown trade war between the world's two largest economies.
Meanwhile, China's factory activity shrank for a seventh month in October, an official survey showed on Friday, keeping alive calls for further stimulus to boost domestic demand, with efforts to ship goods abroad merely exporting price wars.
The official purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 49.0 in October from 49.8 in September, a six-month low, the National Bureau of Statistics' survey showed on Friday. It remained below the 50-mark separating growth from contraction.
On Wall Street, however, major U.S. indexes slipped as investors digested mixed Big Tech earnings and the outcome of the Trump'Xi talks. The S&P 500 fell 0.99% to 6,822.34, the Nasdaq Composite declined 1.57% to 23,581.14, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average eased 0.23% to 47,522.12.
As part of the agreement, the U.S. reduced tariffs on Chinese fentanyl-related imports to 10%, bringing overall tariffs on Chinese goods down to 47% from 57%. In return, Beijing pledged to curb fentanyl flows into the U.S. and increase purchases of American soybeans and other agricultural products. China also postponed new restrictions on rare earth exports by a year.
However, key sticking points remain unresolved ' including the export of Nvidia chips and the ongoing TikTok divestiture dispute. China's Ministry of Commerce said it remains open to discussions with Washington on TikTok but offered no further details.
Domestic Market:
The domestic equity benchmarks ended lower on Thursday, mirroring weak global sentiment after the U.S. Federal Reserve cut interest rates as expected but hinted that it could be the last reduction for 2025.
Investor mood further weakened after the much-anticipated Trump'Xi meeting concluded without tangible progress on a U.S.'China trade deal. Persistent selling by foreign institutional investors (FIIs) added to the pressure.
The Nifty 50 slipped below the 25,900 level, weighed down by losses in private banks and financial services stocks.
The S&P BSE Sensex tumbled 592.67 points or 0.70% to 84,404.46. The Nifty 50 index fell 176.05 points or 0.68% to 25,877.85.
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