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Sensex closes over 150 pts down

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    The benchmark Sensex turned negative on Friday, after having risen as much as 3 pct earlier.

    The BSE benchmark Sensex fell 1.58 per cent on Friday to their lowest close in more than two weeks as the gloomy global economic outlook wilted early gains, with wary investors eyeing this weekend's G20 meeting for some direction.

    Infosys Technologies dropped 3.3 per cent to a one month closing low of 1,217.90 rupees after CLSA said the tech bellwether might miss its revenue guidance in dollar terms for the December quarter on a worsening global financial crisis.

    Tata Teleservices (Maharashtra) gained 12.2 per cent to 20.19 rupees. NTT DoCoMo Inc and Tata Sons have priced their joint open offer for up to 20 per cent of Tata Teleservices at 24.70 rupees a share.

    "There is unwinding happening at higher levels because investors are not feeling confident at all in carrying positions overnight," said Amit Khurana, head of institutional equities at Colin Stewart.

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    "Investors are not putting too much bet on any ground-breaking announcement coming out of the G20 meeting."

    The 30-share BSE index closed down 150.91 points at 9,385.42, its lowest close since Oct. 29, with 23 of its stocks falling. It rose as much as 3.04 per cent in opening deals and then dropped as much as 2.82 per cent during trade.

    "The international outlook is not very clear at this point and, therefore, this kind of volatility will continue," said Amitabh Chakraborty, president equities at Religare Securities.

    The index, which has lost more than half its value in 2008 to be one of the worst Asian performers, declined 5.8 per cent in the week after rising in the last two consecutive weeks.

    ... contd.

    Next12
    Time for a commoners' accreditationBy: Fareeda Rehman | 14-Nov-2008 Reply | Forward Indian stock-market players appear to have suddenly become wise. They are ignoring the desperate acts of most of the foreign stock markets. Thats a good sign. A sign of realisation that things are never going to take off - that there won't be anything absurd like bottoming out or other maliciously misleading terminologies, those that presupposes some kind of balance for the markets. In fact the whole problem may lie there - by failing to recognise that markets are a kind of ecosystem - where smart ones succeed by putting the lesser wittier ones at peril. The end game however is that everyone loses. Its nice that the endgame is in sight. Some say that it was because of collusion of US with oil barons to insist on trade with dollars that the crisis arose. That cannot have such linkages. It would be prudent now, only by resolving to go local or again play global. If global is the preference, there should be global governance mechanism and global currency. If its local, there should be insistence on sustainability and inclusive participation. Which means the world has matured, growth has stunted, and now is the time to become wise - for which markets need to be sidelined completely from entering centre-stage. The world is wiser than the foolish advertisements of markets. Either way ordinary people should now hold the vote - no longer experts. Institutions and universities churning out experts are to be accredited by commoners now - for putting the entire world at huge risk.
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