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Sensex fails to latch on to gains, slumps on Europe woes

Ahead of derivatives expiry, Sensex closes in an almost one month low at 28,224.

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Stocks hit a soft patch for the third straight day as the Sensex succumbed to a slump in European markets as it wiped off early gains and ended lower at 28,224-- an almost one-month low -- ahead of the derivatives expiry.

The beginning of trade, however, offered a picture in contrast as mood remained upbeat after the US presidential debate showed Democrat Hillary Clinton getting an investors' thumbs-up over Republican nominee Donald Trump.

But caution set in as worries grew over the outcome of an upcoming meeting of oil producers in Algeria to discuss ways to lift oil prices. The level of uncertainty became accentuated, with futures and options expiry coming up on Thursday and the monetary policy meet on October 4.

The benchmark, which lost nearly 478.85 points in the previous two sessions, on Tuesday, resumed higher. But selling pressure in the last hour due to profit-booking meant the gauge slipped and settled at 28,223.70, a loss of 70.58 points, or 0.25%.

Displaying volatility, the NSE Nifty managed to close above the 8,700 mark, but was still down 16.65 points, or 0.19%, at 8,706.40.

"FIIs had also been net sellers in the last couple of days, keeping a lid on upsides, and with just a day ahead of F&O expiry, rollovers have remained below average, suggesting that risk appetite is lower, especially with RBI rate decision scheduled for next week," Anand James, Chief Market Strategist, Geojit BNP Paribas Financial Services.

Overall, 18 of the 30-share Sensex team fell. Shares of Adani Ports lost heavily, plunging the most by 2.20%, followed by Bharti Airtel 2.01%. L&T, ONGC, Axis Bank, GAIL and SBI too lost sizeable ground.

Among the sectoral indices, capital goods was hardest hit, down 1.12%, followed by oil & gas (0.72%), metal (0.68%) and PSU (0.62%). 

IT, healthcare, technology and consumer durable stocks provided comfort, rising by up to 0.70%.

The small-cap index was marginally up 0.13% while mid-cap index advanced 0.11%.

Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold shares worth a net Rs 206.40 crore on Monday. European shares showed signs of weakness as London's FTSE slumped 0.19 %, Paris CAC 0.52% and Frankfurt 0.85%. 

"The positive vibes from the global economy were evaporating with the rising perplexity over the oil exporters' meet to find a consensus on production freeze. Investors are in a defensive mode on equities ahead of expiry and the market may turn volatile in the current consolidation phase," said Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit BNP Paribas Financial Services.

The market breadth remained negative as 1,430 stocks ended in the red while 1,254 finished higher and 215 ruled steady.

The total turnover on BSE worked out to Rs 2,890.15 crore, lower than Rs 3,435.24 crore in the previous session. 

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