Record Rally Enters Third Week as Markets Surge While Rupee Hits a New Low
Markets Hit Record High for Third Week Even as Rupee Slides to a New Low
Indian equity markets extended their winning streak for the third consecutive week, with the benchmark indices scaling fresh record highs despite a sharply weakening rupee and persistent global uncertainty. The rally, however, remained rangebound as traders assessed developments around the India–US trade talks, Russia–Ukraine ceasefire discussions, firm global markets, and expectations of interest-rate cuts by the Fed and RBI in December.
The week ended with a mix of enthusiasm and caution: while the markets hit record high, the rupee touched a new low, signaling macroeconomic pressure even as equities continued to attract domestic flows.
For the week ended November 28, the BSE Sensex rose 474.75 points or 0.55 percent, closing at 85,706.67, while the Nifty50 added 134.8 points or 0.51 percent to settle at 26,202.95.
This marks the third straight week of gains, driven largely by domestic liquidity and selective buying in heavyweights.
Index movement remained subdued throughout the week, with intraday swings reflecting nervousness around geopolitical updates and the rupee’s sustained weakness. Despite the volatility, markets hit record high, underlining strong investor appetite.
Also Read : Starting December 1, NSE Will Implement Revised Quantity Freeze Limits for Fin Nifty
The BSE Large-cap Index gained 0.5 percent, supported by robust action in:
Varun Beverages
Hindustan Zinc
Vedanta
Samvardhana Motherson International
Cholamandalam Investment and Finance Company
Canara Bank
Hindalco Industries
However, some large caps lagged, with Adani Enterprises, Siemens Energy India, and CG Power and Industrial Solutions dropping around 5 percent each.
The BSE Mid-cap Index advanced 1.2 percent, outperforming the benchmarks. Key gainers included:
Aditya Birla Capital
Ashok Leyland
Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services
L&T Finance
Inventurus Knowledge Solutions
Coforge
On the downside, mid-cap losers such as Whirlpool of India, Deepak Nitrite, Kaynes Technology India, Tata Communications, and AWL Agri Business faced selling pressure.
Meanwhile, the BSE Small-cap Index ended flat, reflecting selective buying and sharper stock-specific corrections.
Top performers included Best Agrolife, Bigbloc Construction, 63 Moons Technologies, VLS Finance, Fischer Medical Ventures, JSW Holdings, Hazoor Multi Projects, Spectrum Electrical Industries, Nectar Lifesciences, and Lumax Auto Technologies, all rising between 15–34 percent.
At the other end, Magellanic Cloud, Worth Investment & Trading, Antelopus Selan Energy, Ceinsys Tech, Blue Cloud Softech Solutions, Stallion India Fluorochemicals, and several others fell between 10–51 percent, highlighting the underlying fragility in the small-cap space.
Most sectoral indices ended the week higher.
Key outperformers included:
Nifty Pharma
Nifty Media
Nifty PSU Bank
Nifty Bank
Nifty Metal
Nifty IT
Nifty Private Bank
These sectors gained between 1–2 percent, supported by rotation into large-cap names and strengthening global cues.
However, Nifty Defence and Nifty Oil & Gas declined 1 percent each amid profit booking and global commodity volatility.
In terms of market value addition during the week:
Reliance Industries led the charts
Followed by Bajaj Finance, HDFC Bank, and ICICI Bank
Meanwhile, Bharti Airtel, Power Grid Corporation of India, and ITC saw the biggest erosion in market capitalisation.
Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) continued reducing their India exposure, selling ₹3,659 crore worth of equities during the week. In contrast, Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs) bought ₹22,762.62 crore, providing a strong counterbalance.
The persistent DII inflow is one of the reasons Indian markets hit record high despite weakness in global sentiment and currency depreciation.
The rupee hit a new record low of 89.49 per dollar during Friday’s session and ended the week at 89.45, compared with the previous week’s close of 89.40.
Throughout the week, it traded in a narrow but weak 89.04–89.49 range.
The currency’s decline was fueled by:
Rising crude oil prices
Stronger U.S. dollar index
FII outflows
Growing demand for dollars from importers
The rupee’s new low underscores macroeconomic concerns even as equities remain buoyant.
Despite the record highs, analysts expect near-term consolidation as investors track:
India–US trade negotiation outcomes
Russia–Ukraine ceasefire progress
Fed and RBI policy cues
Rupee movements
Monthly global macro data prints
However, with DIIs actively buying and global risk appetite reviving, sentiment remains constructive. The broader trend suggests that markets may gradually extend gains if global volatility remains contained.
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