Diwali Muhurat Trading 2024: In the first trading session of Samvat 2081, the Indian stock market has started trading with a great boom. On the occasion of special one-hour Muhurat trading, BSE Sensex and National Stock Exchange's Nifty opened with a jump. Due to the buying of investors, the Sensex is trading at 79,893 points with a jump of 500 points, while the Nifty is trading at 24,353 points with a jump of 150 points.
Rising and falling stocks
In today's trade, stocks of all sectors in the market rose. There is a strong rise in the stocks of energy banking, IT, auto, metals, energy, pharma, consumer durables, healthcare, oil and gas sector. Apart from this, heavy buying is also being seen in midcap and smallcap stocks. In today's trade, the stock of auto company Mahindra & Mahindra has risen by 2.92 percent, Tata Motors by 1.35 percent, NTPC by 1.18 percent, Axis Bank by 1.11 percent, Tata Steel by 0.94 percent. Among the falling stocks, Sun TV is trading with a decline of 1.16 percent, Dr. Reddy by 0.75 percent, Dr. Lal Pathlab by 0.77 percent.
Market cap of stocks listed on BSE
In today's session, the market cap of the stocks listed on BSE has reached Rs 448.83 lakh crore, which was Rs 444.73 lakh crore in the previous trading session. On the first day of Samvat 2081, investors' wealth has seen a jump of Rs 4.10 lakh crore. Whereas between Samvat 2080 and Samvat 2081, the wealth of Indian stock market investors has seen a jump of Rs 128 lakh crore. In the history of the Indian stock market, investors have earned the most in Samvat 2080.
Advice to investors about the new Samvat
A special puja was organized on Muhurat trading at the National Stock Exchange. NSE MD and CEO Ashish Chauhan wished investors on the occasion of Diwali and said that the new Samvat 2081 should be even better than the previous Samvat 2080. He advised investors that the money is yours and invest it in a better way, and appealed to them not to pay attention to tips, rumors, WhatsApp messages. Also, investors who do not know about derivatives have been advised not to trade in them.
--Advertisement--