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Indian shares fall from near record levels as Reliance and HDFC Bank weigh

Indian shares fall from near record levels as Reliance and HDFC Bank weigh
Indian shares fall from near record levels as Reliance and HDFC Bank weigh

Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank and other heavyweight stocks weighed on the Indian equity benchmarks, which fell from near-record highs Tuesday. Quarterly business updates also influenced stock movements.

The Nifty 50 dropped?0.27% at 26,178.7, and the Sensex fell 0.44% at 85,063.34. In two sessions, the indexes have fallen by 0.6% and 0.8%.

Ten of 16 major sectors rose. The small-caps and the mid-caps both fell by 0.2%.

Reliance Industries' stock, which is the second-heaviest on the benchmarks index, fell 4.5%. This was its steepest percentage drop in a single day since the announcement of the general election results for India, June 4, 2024.

Reliance announced that it did not expect Russian crude to be delivered in January, after U.S. president Donald Trump warned Washington would raise tariffs against India for its oil purchases.

Vinod Nair is the head of research for Geojit Investments. He said that Trump's negative rhetoric could be detrimental to India's stock market at a time when it was anticipating the capping U.S. Tariffs at 25%, down from 50%, and the finalisation of the full trade agreement.

Reliance shares were also affected by concerns about rising competition in the retail segment, following Trent's less-than-expected growth in sales for the December quarter.

Shares of the apparel retailer fell 8.6% in one day.

CLSA has also removed the Reliance model from its India portfolio.

HDFC Bank, India's largest private bank, dropped by 1.6% on Tuesday, adding to the 2.4% drop of Monday, due to concerns about slower deposit growth.

ICICI Bank jumped 2,9% and led the financials by 0.3% on optimism?over improvements in credit growth and earnings?for the sector?in December quarter.

JSW Steel fell 0.8% while Tata Steel was at a high after reports that companies had violated antitrust laws.

Apollo Hospitals rose 3.7% to top the Nifty gainers after Citi raised the price target on the stock due to strong earnings visibility.

(source: Reuters)