The Indian stock markets opened on a weak note on Tuesday, weighed down by persistent foreign portfolio investor (FPI) selling and concerns over a delay in the India-US trade deal, which may lead to a 15 per cent tariff.
The benchmark indices continued to face selling pressure at higher levels, with analysts indicating that the India-US new interim deal is unlikely to be finalised before the August 1 deadline. On Sunday, the US administration indicated that the August 1 deadline wouldn't be extended further.
The Indian stock market started the week on a negative note as both benchmark indices opened in the red on Monday, reflecting weak global cues and investor caution ahead of the August 1 tariff deadline.
Indian stock markets opened flat on Thursday, anticipating investor sentiments to turn positive with India and the UK formalizing the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) later in the day.
Indian stock markets ended flat in the volatile session on Tuesday as many investors opted to book profits amid ongoing quarterly result volatility, and investors remained cautious ahead of uncertainty on India-US trade agreement.
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has allowed the US proprietary trading firm Jane Street to resume trading in the Indian stock markets, noting that the company was permitted to resume trading after complying with the regulator's interim order of July 3 and transferring Rs 4,
Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has allowed U.S. proprietary trading firm Jane Street to resume trading in the Indian stock markets following the US firm deposited USD 567 million, according to a source based report by news agency Reuters.
Indian stock markets made a muted start on Monday, with both benchmark indices opening flat as investor sentiment remained weak amid ongoing uncertainty around the India-US trade deal.