India's equity benchmarks remained muted on Thursday and ended with a marginal loss, possibly due to the ongoing geopolitical conflict in the Middle East and cautious signals from the US Federal Reserve, dampening investors' sentiment.
Indian equity markets opened on a weak note on Thursday, as investors are cautious on prospects of a US strike and the uncertain nature of Iran's response.
The Indian stock markets ended on a flat note on Wednesday, reflecting the uncertainties arising from the tensions in the Middle East and the US Federal Reserve's policy meeting later tonight.
Indian stock markets opened under pressure on Wednesday as geopolitical tensions between Israel and Iran entered the sixth day, with the possibility of direct U.S. involvement adding to investor worries.
The Indian equity indices ended on a negative note on Tuesday, experiencing moderate losses amid risk of escalation of conflicts in the Middle East ahead of the FOMC meeting.
Indian stock markets opened on a positive note on Tuesday, continuing their upward movement from the previous session. However, rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are keeping investors globally on edge.
Indian stock market recovered during the day trade from its opening, both Sensex and Nifty opens over 1.5 per cent down but closed at a little over 0.6 per cent down.
Indian stock markets witnessed a steep fall on Friday morning, marking what many are calling a "Black Friday" for investors. Both benchmark indices opened deep in the red, reacting sharply to rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.
Indian stock markets opened on a cautious note Thursday, reflecting weak global cues and rising geopolitical tensions between Iran and the United States.
Indian stock benchmarks traded largely steady with upward bias on Wednesday, extending gains for the fifth day, taking positive cues from strong economic fundamentals such as comfortable inflation levels, firm economic growth parameters.