Among the sectoral stocks Bank, Auto, Financial Services, IT, Pharma, Private Bank, Realty, and Healthcare traded in red during the initial hours of the trade.
On the other hand the sectoral stocks of FMCG, Media, Metal, PSU Bank, Consumer Durables, Oil and Gas traded in red.
The
Following the presentation of the Union
During the trade hours last day, the stocks of consumer durables, FMCG, and pharma sectors saw buyers flowing following the incentives proposed by the Finance Minister.
The greater emphasis on employment, skilling, and continued infrastructure spending affected the market movement on Tuesday.
"Overall budget has proved to be a non-event, with Indian markets falling and then recovering during the day itself. DIIs bought strongly, while FIIs unloaded a large amount on
The overseas investors turned net sellers in the Indian market on Tuesday after almost a week. The foreign investors offloaded the stock worth Rs 2,975.3 crore on the budget day. While the domestic investors were the net buyers with Rs 1,418 crore as per the National Stock Exchange (NSE) data.
"Technically, the Nifty 50 charted a small negative candle with a long lower shadow, resembling a bullish hammer pattern, suggesting potential for a rebound. Despite recent volatility, the index has held above its 10-day and 20-day EMAs for several weeks, indicating resilience," said Varun Aggarwal MD, Profit Idea.
Asian markets mirrored Wall Street's losses, with Japan's Nikkei 225 and South Korea's Kospi both trading lower on Wednesday. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index futures pointed to a flat opening.
In the US, major indices closed slightly lower on Tuesday amidst earnings reports from Alphabet and Tesla. The Dow Jones declined by 57.35 points (0.14 per cent) to 40,358.09, the S&P 500 dropped 8.67 points (0.16 per cent) to 5,555.74, and the Nasdaq Composite edged down by 10.22 points (0.06 per cent) to 17,997.35. Tesla shares fell 2 per cent in regular trading and an additional 8 per cent in after-hours trading, while Alphabet saw a modest increase of 0.1 per cent.