Adani Enterp.

2445.5 2.80

Adani Ports

1233.2 -9.90

Apollo Hospitals

7088.5 -54.00

Asian Paints

2432 -13.00

Axis Bank

1216.8 -6.20

Bajaj Auto

8141 -106.50

Bajaj Finance

9260.5 -13.00

Bajaj Finserv

2077 -26.50

Bharat Electron

303.35 3.40

Bharti Airtel

1852.2 -31.20

Cipla

1528.2 17.10

Coal India

398.6 -1.90

Dr Reddy's Labs

1175 -2.40

Eicher Motors

5784 -26.50

Eternal Ltd

237.47 3.23

Grasim Inds

2749.4 -7.50

HCL Technologies

1479.9 -2.10

HDFC Bank

1961.7 34.60

HDFC Life Insur.

712.55 0.35

Hero Motocorp

3833.6 -83.40

Hind. Unilever

2398.7 47.70

Hindalco Inds.

620.1 -1.90

ICICI Bank

1416.5 6.70

IndusInd Bank

787.5 -40.70

Infosys

1422.8 -28.20

ITC

433.6 10.75

JSW Steel

1044.2 10.20

Kotak Mah. Bank

2268.8 27.40

Larsen & Toubro

3257.8 -22.70

M & M

2817.1 53.10

Maruti Suzuki

11734 -11.00

Nestle India

2407.3 7.90

NTPC

360.25 -4.30

O N G C

247.78 -2.00

Power Grid Corpn

312.55 -7.45

Reliance Industr

1291.2 -4.30

SBI Life Insuran

1619 -9.50

Shriram Finance

703.5 0.50

St Bk of India

822.4 5.70

Sun Pharma.Inds.

1747.4 2.50

Tata Consumer

1136.7 15.70

Tata Motors

630.85 0.80

Tata Steel

138.16 -1.02

TCS

3314.4 -7.20

Tech Mahindra

1376.5 3.00

Titan Company

3337.4 1.30

Trent

5323 -37.00

UltraTech Cem.

11959 25.00

Wipro

234.15 -4.30

Pre-Session - Detailed News Back
Sensex, Nifty set to extend gains
25-Mar-25   08:18 Hrs IST

GIFT Nifty:

The GIFT Nifty March 2025 futures contract is up 21 points, indicating a positive opening in the Nifty 50 index today.

Institutional Flows:

Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) bought shares worth Rs 3,055.76 crore, while domestic institutional investors (DIIs) were net buyers to the tune of Rs 98.54 crore in the Indian equity market on 24 March 2025, provisional data showed.

According to NSDL data, FPIs have sold shares worth Rs 28154.42 crore (so far) in the secondary market during March 2025. This follows their sale of shares worth Rs 41748.97 crore in February 2024.

Global Markets:

Most Asian stocks climbed on Tuesday, tracking overnight gains on Wall Street, as investors grew optimistic that U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs might be less severe than anticipated.

In China, the central bank announced changes to the way it sells medium-term loans, a move that market participants believe could further diminish the role of such instruments in guiding monetary policy. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) stated it will issue 450 billion yuan ($62.03 billion) in one-year medium-term lending facility (MLF) loans on Tuesday. Starting this month, MLF operations will be conducted using a fixed-quantity, interest-rate bidding, and multiple-price bidding method, the PBOC added.

On Wall Street, U.S. indices surged on Monday amid reports that Trump's April 2 tariffs will be less harsh than previously feared. The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 1.42%, the S&P 500 climbed 1.76%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite soared 2.27%.

Tesla shares, which had been declining for nine consecutive weeks, rebounded nearly 12%, building on their Friday gains. Meta Platforms and Nvidia also saw gains of more than 3%.

Meanwhile, 23AndMe Holding Co plummeted 59% after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

Wall Street has been under pressure in recent weeks amid concerns that Trump's tariffs could drive up inflation, disrupt global trade, and slow economic growth. Earlier this month, major indices slumped to six-month lows on such fears.

While Trump has repeatedly described April 2 as 'liberation day' for the U.S., investors found some relief in signs that the tariffs' scope may be narrower than initially expected, potentially limiting their economic impact.

Domestic Market:

The domestic stock market extended its rally for the sixth consecutive session on Monday, with the Sensex soaring over 1,000 points and the Nifty50 closing above 23,650, driven by gains in banking and energy stocks. Analysts attribute this surge to improving domestic economic cues, falling U.S. Treasury yields'making emerging markets like India more attractive'and a return to value buying as valuations normalize. Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) have turned net buyers in three of the last four sessions, reversing months of selling, while central bank liquidity measures have further boosted sentiment. However, the rally's sustainability will depend on Q4 earnings results and developments surrounding U.S. tariffs.

The S&P BSE Sensex surged 1,078.87 points, or 1.40%, to 77,984.38. The Nifty 50 index rallied 307.95 points, or 1.32%, to 23,658.35. In the six consecutive sessions, both the indices jumped 5.63% each.

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DJIA 38194.85
-968.38 -2.47%
S&P 500 5180.40
-123.30 -2.32%
HANG SENG 21543.80
148.66 0.69%
NIKKEI 225 34239.97
-39.95 -0.12%
FTSE 100 8275.66
0.06 0.00%
NIFTY 24167.25
41.70 0.17%
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