NEW DELHI : Indian benchmark indices fell the most in six days on Thursday on continued selling by foreign institutional investors (FII) amid rising oil prices and US bond yields and weak Asian markets like Hang Seng and Nikkei 225 which plunged almost a per cent and a half each. Indian investors were left poorer by ₹2.98 trillion, with the NSE’s market cap falling to ₹314.26 trillion. Underscoring the negative sentiment and possibility of an extended correction, fear gauge India Vix surged the most in six months.
A steep rise in Vix signals bearishness, while a fall indicates optimism. The jump in Vix coincided with expiry of the September series of derivatives contracts. The Nifty fell by 0.98% to 19,523.55 while the Sensex closed down nine-tenths of a per cent to 65,508.32 as FPIs sold a provisional ₹3,364.22 crore.
Domestic institutions bought shares worth a provisional ₹2,711.48 crore. This enabled Nifty to recover from its intraday loss of 1.14% and close above the 19,500 mark. The India Vix surged by 10.68% to 12.82 on fears of crude oil hitting $100 a barrel and the US benchmark 10 -year bond yield trading at a 16 -year peak of 4.65% leading to sustained FPI outflows from emerging markets like India.
FPIs sold ₹14,768 crore this month through 27 September after buying shares worth ₹1.69 trillion in seven months. “Creeping fears of crude testing 100/bbl mark and rising US bond yields on expect-ations of Fed remaining hawkish for longer have driven FPI outflows, and I suspect we could correct some more until Q2 result season gets underway from second week of Oct-ober," said Andrew Holland, CEO, Avendus Capital Public Markets Alternate Strategies. While Brent crude surged 27% from $73 a barrel to $93 from 10 July to
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