Sensex, Nifty edge higher; foreign outflow concerns cap gains
India’s trade deficit widened to a five-month high in April.

Asian shares steadied in early trade on news that the US was planning to delay tariffs on auto imports, providing much-needed relief to markets. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was flat, while Australian and South Korean indices were little changed.
Oil prices rose for the third straight day, as the risk of conflict in West Asia stoked fears of supply disruptions, negating an unexpected rise in US inventories. Amid all this, Brent crude futures touched the $72 mark.
India’s trade deficit widened to a five-month high in April as rising crude prices raised import costs and gold imports swelled.
FIIs have suddenly turned sellers in equities in seven out of last 10 sessions. They offloaded shares worth Rs 1,142.44 crore on Wednesday, NSE data showed.
Among Sensex stocks, Tata Motors was the biggest gainer, up around 1.07 per cent. Other gainers were Vedanta, Infosys, Bajaj Finance, Powergrid and Tata Steel.
Kotak Bank was the biggest loser, falling over 1 per cent. L&T, Coal India, M&M, HDFC and ITC joined Kotak on the list of losers.
Off the main board, IndiGo shares kept buzzing after reports of serious differences between the two founder-promoters, threatening to affect the airline’s functioning. Clauses in the shareholders’ agreement and differences between the two founders over strategies and ambitions are said to be the bone of contention. IndiGo shares slipped nearly 3 per cent.
The broader market moved in step with the benchmark. BSE Midcap and BSE Smallcap indices traded in line with the overall market mood, gaining 0.16 per cent and 0.13 per cent respectively.
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