BENGALURU, Nov 16 (Reuters) - Indian shares are expected
to open lower on Wednesday, a day after the Sensex closed at a
fresh high, as global markets were rattled by media reports that
said Russian missile attacks killed two people in a Polish
village near the Ukraine border.
India's NSE stock futures listed on the Singapore exchange
were down 0.25%, as of 0217 GMT. The MSCI's broadest
index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell
0.22%.
Reuters reported firefighters said two people were killed in
an eastern Polish village near the Ukrainian border, news that
raised fears of an escalation in the war. Other media said the
deaths were due to what Kyiv said were the heaviest Russian
missile strikes since the war began.
Separately, India would exceed budget estimates for direct
tax collection by 25%-30% in fiscal 2023, an income tax official
from India's finance ministry said.
On Tuesday, the NSE Nifty 50 index closed 0.41%
higher at 18,403.40, while the S&P BSE Sensex advanced
0.40% to 61,872.99 - a new record close - in a volatile session.
Foreign institutional investors sold net 2.21 billion Indian
rupees ($27.25 million) worth of equities on Tuesday, while
domestic investors offloaded net 5.49 billion rupees of shares,
according to provisional data available with the National Stock
Exchange.
Stocks to watch:
** RBL Bank is looking to ramp up its retail
exposure to protect its books from being over-exposed to large
corporates, its CEO R Subramaniakumar told Reuters.
** Vaibhav Global said a few of its units faced
cyber-attack and it is gradually recovering systems back to
normal operations.
** Tata Consultancy Services said TAP Air Portugal
selected it as its strategic partner.
** IOL Chemicals and Pharmaceuticals approved
formation of a wholly owned subsidiary in United Kingdom aimed
at expanding business globally.
** Lender Punjab & Sind Bank revised its one-year
MCLR to 8%.
** Bharat Electronics signed MoUs with SVC Tech
Ventures, Hindustan Shipyard, U.S. firm Profense and Yantra
India.
** Sugar stocks may move as Reuters reported sugar mills in
India have been renegotiating and defaulting on contracts to
supply 400,000 tonnes of the sweetener to overseas buyers.
($1 = 81.1000 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Praveen Paramasivam in Bengaluru; Editing by
Dhanya Ann Thoppil)