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.
Participants in the Indian stock markets will closely monitor ongoing tariff-related discussions, high-frequency indicators from both the US and India, two consecutive declines in forex reserves, and the earnings of the companies.
Indian benchmark indices on Wednesday opened flat due to the weakness in Asian markets and cautious investors' sentiment ahead of the corporate earnings and major economic updates on trade discussions.
American proprietary trading firm Jane Street Capital deposited approximately Rs 4843.50 crore in an escrow account and requested market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) to allow them to resume trading in the Indian stock markets.