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Indian benchmarks gain monthly on hopes of a trade deal, but Pakistan tensions weigh

Indian benchmarks closed at the same level on Wednesday, but ended a solid month. Both the Nifty and Sensex posted monthly gains due to expectations of a U.S. India trade deal and new foreign inflows.

The BSE Sensex fell 0.06% on Wednesday to 80,242.24 and the Nifty 50 lost 0.01% at 22,334.2.

The Nifty and Sensex both gained 3.5% in April.

HDFC Bank has slowed down its daily moves as it offsets the pressure of tensions with Pakistan.

The banks and financial sector led the monthly gains, supported by stable earnings and foreign inflows.

The IT index dropped 3% in April. This is its fourth consecutive month of declines - the longest losing streak it has had since October 2016.

The optimism surrounding trade deals with the U.S. has fueled the FPIs to invest $4.4 billion into Indian stocks over the past ten sessions. This is their largest buying spree in almost two years.

Both countries' officials have hinted that a bilateral agreement could be reached as soon as this week or the following.

Samrat Dasgupta is CEO of Esquire Capital Investment Advisors. He said that the markets rose in April due to the influx of money from the U.S. to emerging markets because of economic uncertainty.

He warned, however, that the jitters about a possible escalation between India and Pakistan may keep markets volatile in the future.

According to reports on Tuesday, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi gave military chiefs the freedom to respond to the deadly militant attack that took place in Kashmir last week.

Brokers cited a weak quarterly pre-provision and higher credit costs for the decline in Bajaj Finance, a non-bank lender.

HDFC Bank rose by 0.9% and supported the benchmarks.

The Indian stock markets will be closed on Thursday for a public holiday. Trading will resume Friday, May 2.

(source: Reuters)