Adani Enterp.
2619.4 -26.90
Adani Ports
1450.2 10.00
Apollo Hospitals
7242 -66.50
Asian Paints
2341.1 -17.60
Axis Bank
1199.2 -25.90
Bajaj Auto
8376 -60.00
Bajaj Finance
936.5 -10.50
Bajaj Finserv
2056 12.00
Bharat Electron
421.5 7.00
Bharti Airtel
2009.6 -17.50
Cipla
1505.9 3.50
Coal India
391.95 -2.20
Dr Reddy's Labs
1283.3 -17.70
Eicher Motors
5656.5 -3.50
Eternal Ltd
264.15 2.29
Grasim Inds
2844.5 -16.60
HCL Technologies
1728.6 5.30
HDFC Bank
2001.5 -13.40
HDFC Life Insur.
814.3 7.35
Hero Motocorp
4237.1 -83.20
Hind. Unilever
2294.6 -12.30
Hindalco Inds.
692.85 -4.50
ICICI Bank
1445.8 -16.40
IndusInd Bank
872.1 14.40
Infosys
1601.8 -6.20
ITC
416.45 -2.20
JSW Steel
1020.5 -8.40
Kotak Mah. Bank
2163.5 -44.40
Larsen & Toubro
3669.8 -9.40
M & M
3183.2 -20.10
Maruti Suzuki
12400 -242.00
Nestle India
2465.3 6.60
NTPC
334.9 -3.40
O N G C
244.21 1.38
Power Grid Corpn
299.9 0.65
Reliance Industr
1500.6 -14.80
SBI Life Insuran
1838.3 -12.30
Shriram Finance
706.85 6.90
St Bk of India
820.35 14.95
Sun Pharma.Inds.
1675.7 -11.90
Tata Consumer
1098.9 -25.40
Tata Motors
688 1.10
Tata Steel
159.76 -1.69
TCS
3462 20.90
Tech Mahindra
1687 12.60
Titan Company
3690.2 24.00
Trent
6217.5 198.00
UltraTech Cem.
12093 -120.00
Wipro
265.98 0.93
GIFT Nifty:
GIFT Nifty July 2025 futures were trading 1.50 points higher in early trade, suggesting a flat opening for the Nifty 50.
Institutional Flows:
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold shares worth 2,427.74 crore, while domestic institutional investors (DIIs) were net buyers to the tune of Rs 2,372.96 crore in the Indian equity market on 25 June 2025, provisional data showed.
According to NSDL data, FPIs have sold shares worth Rs 6771.80 crore in the secondary market during June 2025. This follows their purchase of shares worth Rs 18082.82 crore in May 2024.
Global Markets:
Asian shares wobbled on Thursday, with investors still digesting the fragile ceasefire declared between Israel and Iran.
Late Monday, President Trump announced a multi-stage truce between the two nations, urging both sides to hold the line. By Wednesday, the ceasefire seemed to be sticking, just a day after both countries said they had wrapped up a 12-day aerial showdown.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed Iran is now much further from building a nuclear weapon post-strikes, downplaying intelligence that says the air raids merely bought a few extra months.
Trump, meanwhile, credited the swift U.S. military response for ending the skirmish and said he plans to push Iran to abandon its nuclear ambitions during talks next week.
Back in the U.S., shares ended Wednesday on a subdued note. The S&P 500 hovered near the flatline, closing at 6,092.16 as investors looked for clues on whether it could challenge its all-time high. The Nasdaq inched up 0.31%, while the Dow slipped 0.25%.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell wrapped up his Capitol Hill testimony, continuing to strike a cautious tone on inflation and trade. While he left the door open for future rate cuts if recent pressures prove short-lived, he avoided committing to any timeline, despite mounting pressure from President Trump.
NVIDIA hit a fresh all-time high after Loop Capital boosted its price target to $250 from $175, pointing to strong and sustained demand for AI chips as artificial intelligence adoption surges.
FedEx shares dropped over 3% after the company issued a weaker-than-expected profit forecast for the current quarter.
Domestic Market:
Equity benchmarks ended sharply higher on Wednesday, buoyed by positive global cues as investor sentiment improved following signs of a tentative ceasefire between Israel and Iran. A strong showing by IT and consumer durables stocks helped push the indices higher. The S&P BSE Sensex surged 700.40 points (0.85%) to close at 82,755.51, while the Nifty 50 jumped 200.40 points (0.80%) to 25,244.75. Over the two consecutive sessions, the Sensex has gained 1.05%, and the Nifty has climbed 1.09%.
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