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Indian shares extend gains on US-Iran peace deal

Indian shares closed higher 'on Tuesday. They advanced for a third consecutive session as a preliminary U.S. - Iran peace deal cooled down oil prices & improved risk appetite.

The Nifty?50 increased 0.57%, to?23989.15. Meanwhile, the BSE Sensex rose 0.71%, to 76 808.48. This represents gains of 3.6% and 4% respectively in just three sessions.

The small-cap and middle-cap indexes each rose 0.4%.

Brent crude dropped about 2%, to $81.6 per barrel. This was a good thing for India, which imports oil.

The?moderation in oil prices, to around $82 per barrel, along with India's stable macro-fundamentals, steady interest rates, and controlled inflation augurs well after the year-to date underperformance against emerging-market peers, said?Vinit Blinjkar.

Foreign portfolio investors, who have sold Indian stocks for a record $30.8 billion in 2026, became net buyers after 13 consecutive sessions of selling. Inflows of $21.2 million were recorded.

Bolinjkar said that "coordinated steps taken by the government and central bank to support rupee and attract foreign investors to bonds?are positives to the markets, as they could result in a reversal to foreign outflows."

Devyani International, the operator of KFC India, jumped by 2.5%. Sapphire Foods grew by 5%.

The company said it received "no objections" from NSE, and "no adverse remarks" from BSE regarding its proposed merger with Sapphire Foods.

HDFC Bank and Reliance Industries, index heavyweights, rose by 1% and 1,7% respectively to lead benchmark gains.

Aluminium producers Hindalco Industries (and?National Aluminium) fell by 3.1% and 4.1% respectively, tracking weaker global aluminum prices.

General Insurance Corporation of India fell 8% following the announcement by government that it would sell a stake at a 9.1% discount from its previous closing price. Bharathrajeswaran, Bengaluru. Edited by Sonia Cheema & Ronojoy Mazumdar.

(source: Reuters)