Indian shares advance in year’s final session to trim monthly losses
-
December 31, 2025
-
By: WBCAdmin
-
18
By Bharath Rajeswaran and Vivek Kumar M
Dec 31 (Reuters) – Indian shares bounced back in a broad-based rally on the last day of 2025, led by metal stocks after the government imposed tariffs on some steel products to curb cheap imports.
The Nifty 50 index (.NSEI), opens new tab rose 0.74% to 26,129.60 and the BSE Sensex index (.BSESN), opens new tab gained 0.64% to 85,220.60. Indian benchmarks lagged their emerging and Asian market peers in 2025 amid record foreign outflows.
Get the latest news from India and how it matters to the world with the Reuters India File newsletter. Sign up here.
The shares “remained trapped within a broader consolidation zone in December characterised by muted volumes,” said Dhupesh Dhameja, research analyst at SAMCO Securities.
However, the blue-chips are poised for stronger returns next year, underpinned by improving earnings outlook, steady economic growth and more reasonable valuations.
The near-term trajectory will depend on auto sales data for December, due on Thursday, upcoming quarterly results and the union budget in February, analysts said.
WINNERS AND LOSERS
On the day, gains were led by metal stocks (.NIFTYMET), opens new tab, which rose 1.5% after the government imposed a three-year import tariff on select steel products.
Reliance Industries (RELI.NS), opens new tab, one of the heaviest-weighted stocks on Nifty 50, rose 2% to post its best session in a month.
For the month, 10 of the 16 major sectors fell. The broader small-caps (.NIFSMCP100), opens new tab and mid-caps (.NIFMDCP100), opens new tab fell 0.7% and 0.9%, respectively.
Among individual stocks, airline IndiGo (INGL.NS), opens new tab fell 14.3% after cancelling about 4,500 flights earlier in the month as poor pilot roster planning hurt nationwide air travel.
Shriram Finance (SHMF.NS), opens new tab surged 17% after Japan’s MUFG (8306.T), opens new tab said it will buy a 20% stake in the non-bank lender for $4.4 billion in the largest cross-border investment in India’s financial sector.
Categories
Recent Posts
- NATO is done if Trump invades Greenland, Danish PM warns
- ‘Everything stops, including NATO’: Danish PM’s stern warning to Donald Trump over Greenland takeover threats
- Zelenskyy Accuses India of Double Standards After Delhi Voices Concern Over Alleged Attack on Putin Residence
- Russia releases video footage to challenge Kyiv over alleged drone attack
- Tata Steel, JSW Steel and other metal stocks jump up to 5% as Government imposes import tariff on steel products
Recent Comments
No comments to show.
Leave a comment