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Indian benchmarks rise on the back of IT and financials as foreign buyers, easing fears about tariffs, boost Indian benchmarks

Indian benchmarks rise on the back of IT and financials as foreign buyers, easing fears about tariffs, boost Indian benchmarks

India's benchmark indices rose on Monday, led by heavyweights in information technology and finance, amid foreign capital flows and eased tariff concerns.

The NSE Nifty50 was up 0.56% to 23,790.2 at 10:33 am IST. Meanwhile, the BSE Sensex gained 0.60%, reaching 78,444.19.

With the recent correction, Nifty is trading at 17,8x forward earnings for one year. Sweta JAIN, research analyst of Anand Rathi Share and Stock Brokers, said that this is a discount from its median 5-year and 10-year earnings, which offers value opportunities to investors.

Both benchmarks have recovered their losses for the year, but they are still down by 9.4% and 8,6% respectively from their all-time highs reached in late September.

In the last three sessions, foreign investors who have been selling shares since the peak of the market have purchased shares worth 137.65 trillion rupees ($1.61billion).

The IT and Financial sectors, which are dominated by foreign investors, saw the biggest gains on Tuesday.

After U.S. president Donald Trump suggested that he could give tariff breaks to "a lot of countries", the IT index saw a jump of over 2%.

Trump's tariffs will likely lead to inflation in the U.S., which is bad news for IT companies that derive an important portion of their revenues from this country.

The U.S. Treasury Secretary said that countries can avoid

Reciprocal

Tariffs can be reduced by reducing trade barriers.

The Indian financial market rose by 0.4% after the central Bank issued revised guidelines for priority sector lending. These included a broader definition of renewable energy, and increased loan limits for housing.

Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency jumped 3% while HDFC Bank jumped 1%. Citi and Jefferies credited the new PSL guidelines for its success.

Ultratech Cement gained 3% while ACC and Ambuja Cements rose 1% and 1.55% respectively after UBS announced the end of rough patches on a likely demand recovery for the cement industry in fiscal year 2026.

Smallcaps, which are more broadly focused on the domestic market, were down by 0.5% while midcaps were flat.

(source: Reuters)