TCS, among the Nifty 50 companies, was the top loser this morning. It declined over 2 per cent. Analysts attribute the decline to less-than-estimated earnings during the October-December quarter.
BSE Sensex surged 77 points to 60,917.87 while Nifty 50 went up 25 points to 18,130.35 at 9.27 am on Monday. Some of the most active stocks on BSE that went up in morning trade were Tata Communications, Lloyd, Usha Mart, Timken and Kalpataru Power while MCX, Jindal Poly, Shipping Corporation
The shares of the company were trading at Rs 373.35 apiece on Friday afternoon. The shares jumped more than 46.64 per cent in a span of five days an grew 155.81 per cent in a span of 30 days on BSE while the firm's shares had risen 287.97 per cent in six months.
The BSE Sensex went down 115 points to 60,811.52 while NSE Nifty 50 declined 45 points to 18,086.75. Some of the most active stocks that gained in morning trade were Tata Teleservices, RVNL and Adani Wilmar while Dhampur Sugar, Nava, Kitex, Coromadel and Indian Overseas Bank were some of
Indian stock indices traded higher during Tuesday's session and remained in the green for the second straight day. The benchmark stock indices - Sensex and Nifty - had witnessed losses for four days last week.
S&P BSE Sensex went up 317.49 points to 60,883.91 while NSE's broad-based Nifty 50 surged 106.50 points to 18,121.50 on Tuesday morning. Some of the most active stocks were Dalmia Sugars, Indian Overseas Bank, Union Bank of India, Suzlon Energy on BSE while Morepen, J and K Bank, Ajan
Key indices S&P BSE Sensex surged 265 points to 61,968.17 while NSE Nifty 50 gained 72 points to 18,457.35 at 9.20 am on Wednesday morning. Among the most active stocks on BSE, Shyam Metal, Lal Pathlab, Bajaj Hind and UCO Bank were some of the gainers. Some of the laggards on the index w
S&P BSE Sensex gained 40 points to 61,378.29 whereas NSE Nifty 50 surged 19.75 to 18,288.75 level at 9.30 am on Monday. Some of the gainers on BSE were Dalmia Sugars, Bajaj Hind, Renuka Sugars and Dwarikesh Sugar. During the morning trade, laggards were Lemon Tree, PNC Infra, Affle and E