Sensex closes at 29,815.59, down 131 points. Down 1,310 points from the day's high, as RBI presser takes steam from the rally.
"Overall MPC gave more than what was expected and assured to resort to more measures if the situation worsens. The impact of these measures on the economic growth could take some time to fructify. Financials will get breathing space as far as recovery and NPA recognition is concerned. It could elevate sentiments temporarily but the main impact will be visible post the lifting of lockdown" - Dhiraj Relli, MD & CEO, HDFC Securities.
"Three months moratorium on all term loans is another relief for all including NBFCs, Banks, Corporate and the general public.It is a very good policy to cheer the market but the problem is that the market has already rallied too much from lower levels ahead of policy and real trend decider for the market will be the trend in new cases of Covid-19 globally and locally." Amit Guptato DH
"Banks are being motivated to lend by the cut in both Repo rate and CRR, where LTRO money should be invested in commercial papers by banks and that will be considered as a held to maturity, therefore, there will be no issue of MTM losses. So we should expect lower yields in the corporate bond market, therefore, the bond market should rejoice to RBI policy":Mr. Amit Gupta, Co-Founder & CEO, TradingBells tells DH
·There would be no freeze in credit/debt market
·Banks get some (e.g. CRR cut, more funding at low cost, no provisioning for 90 days) and lose some (e.g. lower lending rate, pressure to lend, future asset quality deterioration)
·Most positive for leveraged sectors and companies
·This would not necessarily promote growth but avert a collapse, so a big positive
·To boost sentiments”
"This is RBI’s whatever it takes moment" -Sujan Hajra, chief economist, Anand Rathi Shares & Stock Brokersto DH
Lending institutions allowed a deferrment of 3 months on interest payment
This deferrment will not result in downgrade of asset classification
This will release Rs 1.37 lakh crore in the system, Das says.
Repo rate cut by 75 basis points from 5.15% to 4.4%
Reverse repo rate cut 90 basis points to 4%
Shares of Yes Bank Ltd soared 10% in early trade. The lender on Thursday said it was looking to raise up to 50 billion rupeesin an effort to shore up its capital base.
Meanwhile, the rupee was stronger by 0.4% at 74.6900 against the dollar but still hovered around its all-time lows that it hit earlier this week.
Despite its best rally in many years, Indian markets are likely to remain in bear market territory for this week, analysts on Dalal Street say. Last night, with 6% rally, Dow 30 had escaped bear market zone. A Bear market territory is when an index has lost 20% of its life-highs.
Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das is expected to address the media at 10 AM local time on Friday. Many largely expect the central bank to cut interest rates to help tide an already slowing economy threatened by the pandemic.
Asian stocks rose on Friday as investors wagered policymakers will roll out more stimulus measures to combat the coronavirus pandemic after U.S. unemployment filings surged to a record.
Gold eased on Friday as some investors booked profits after prices hit a two-week high in the last session amid hopes for further stimulus to curb the coronavirus' economic toll, but the metal was headed for its best weekly gain in more than 11 years.
The dollar was on track for its biggest weekly fall in more than a decade on Friday as a series of stimulus measures around the world, including a $2.2 trillion U.S. package, helped temper a rout in globalmarketstriggered by the coronavirus pandemic.
Data showing an unprecedented rise in U.S. jobless claims underscored the virus' devastating impact on the economy, but subsequent rise in Wall Street shares raised hopes that a torrent of selling in risk assets may have run its course for now.
The dollar fell more than 1% to 108.35 yen, due largely to Japanese repatriating funds ahead of their fiscal year end on March, after having shed 1.44% overnight. The euro also stayed firm at $1.1041 after a jump of 1.40% on Thursday.
Oil prices rallied on Friday, tracking Wall Street gains after progress was made towards a $2 trillion rescue package to help the coronavirus-hit American economy.
After tumbling for the past four weeks, Brent crude was up 50 cents, or nearly 2%, at $26.84 a barrel by 0116 GMT, and on track to end the week steady or only slightly lower.