India Finance News

Stock Market Today LIVE Updates: Market gives up early gains as Sensex slips below 31,000-level, Nifty up 86 points; HUL among top gainers – Firstpost






12:02 (IST)

More than 29 mn hydroxychloroquine doses have come from India: Donald Trump

A sizeable chunk of the 29 million doses of hydroxychloroquine bought by the US to combat the coronavirus pandemic is from India, President Donald Trump has said as he acknowledged that Prime Minister Narendra Modi was “great” when he sought his help to allow the sale of the anti-malaria drug to treat the growing number of COVID-19 patients in America.

Trump and Prime Minister Modi spoke over the phone last week. During the call, Trump requested Modi to lift the hold on the American order of hydroxychloroquine, of which India is the major producer.

“I bought millions of doses (of hydroxychloroquine). More than 29 million. I spoke to Prime Minister Modi, a lot of it (hydroxychloroquine) comes out of India. I asked him if he would release it? He was Great. He was really good,” Trump told Sean Hannity of the Fox News on Monday night.

“You know they put a stop because they wanted it for India,” Trump said responding to a question on the usage of hydroxychloroquine.






11:54 (IST)

Corporates appeal to unite CSR efforts to protect vulnerable

A section of India Inc on Tuesday appealed all corporate social responsibility initiatives to unite and focus efforts towards protecting the vulnerable sections of the society from the COVID-19 pandemic.

IT services major Wipro’s chairman Rishad Premji, Edelweiss Foundation’s — the CSR arm of financial services major — Vidya Shah and Rohini Nilekani of Arghyam have come together and joined hands with global non-profit Oxfam in making the appeal.

Th appealed to CSR foundations, funding and philanthropic organisations to focus efforts in protecting the elderly, the sick, the physically challenged, the poor and informal sector, migrant workers, a statement said.






11:51 (IST)

Market gives up early gains as Sensex slips below 31,000-level

Market gave up the morning gains sharply as Sensex was trading 223.85 points or 0.74 percent higher at 30,291.06 while Nifty was up 86.20 points or 0.98 percent at 8,878.40 at around 11.45 am.






11:41 (IST)

Jharkhand’s ‘Sakhi Mandals’ using medicinal plants to make hand sanitisers

‘Sakhi Mandal’ (self-help group) in Jharkhand’s Khunti district is using medicinal plants along with other ingredients to prepare hand sanitizer in their
fight against COVID-19 pandemic, a government official said.

Lemon grass or basil oil is also being added to the hand sanitiser by the ‘Sakhi Mandal’ as these are medicinal plant and can increase the effectiveness of the sanitizer, the official said.

A total of 225 litres of hand sanitizer have been manufactured in Khunti by the ‘Sakhi Mandal’ and the quantity would be increased to 1,000 litres in the next two days, he said.

The hand sanitisers have been packaged in 100 ml, 250 ml and 500 ml bottles.






11:38 (IST)

Dollar firms as virus worries return

The dollar found a footing on Wednesday as investors returned to safe-havens, reversing some risk currency gains made on hopes the coronavirus crisis in Europe and New York was slowing.

The greenback rose on most majors, a day after suffering its worst drop against a basket of currencies in nearly two weeks.

It was not enough to recoup the ground given in recent days, but came after a sour end to trade on Wall Street on Tuesday and as a two-day rally in Asia’s equity markets ran out of puff.

The largest gains came against the risk-sensitive Australian and New Zealand dollars, which each fell about 0.4 percent.






11:34 (IST)

Wobbly US fiscal response could deepen coronavirus recession

The US government’s massive effort to nurse the economy through the coronavirus crisis was billed as a send-money-and-don’t-sweat-the-details flood of cash to people and businesses in a $22 trillion system that has ground to a halt. So far, the checks are not in the mail.

From technological glitches to confusion over the fine points of policy, the delays are mounting. The federal government’s muddled response risks deepening and lengthening a recession already historic for the speed of its onset.

States are struggling to process a historic mountain of unemployment claims on outdated technology. Large corporations, including companies slammed by the “social distancing” edicts keeping people at home, remain in the dark on the details of promised loans.

Small businesses by the millions are desperately seeking cash, while banks still lack the right paperwork days into a lending programme.






11:30 (IST)

Manappuram jumps 10% in morning trade

#CNBCTV18Maerket | Manappuram extends gains, up 10% in trade pic.twitter.com/zFTQ5DTxfV

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





11:25 (IST)

Market off highs, Sensex slips below 31,000-mark

Market gave up the morning gains as Sensex was trading 761.02 points or 2.53 percent higher at 30,828.23 while Nifty was up 185.35 points or 2.11 percent at 8,977.55 at around 11.20 am.






11:16 (IST)

India’s Wabag secures 5-year operation, maintenance contract from Bahrain STP

Va Tech Wabag, a water technology Indian multinational company, has secured a Rs 90 crore order from Bahrain authorities towards operation, maintenance and management of the Madinat Salman sewage treatment plant and long sea outfall for five years.

Wabag was awarded the engineering, procurement and construction scope of 40 million litres per day sewage treatment plant and long sea outfall to cater to a population of one lakh.

The project was funded by the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development.






11:10 (IST)

Pandemic set to tip Japan into deep recession this year

Japan is expected to slip into a deep recession this year with the economy set to contract for a third straight quarter in April-June, a Reuters poll showed on Wednesday, as the coronavirus outbreak wreaks havoc on businesses and daily life.

Nearly 80 percent of economists polled saw the Bank of Japan’s next move to be an easing of monetary policy. About half said it would happen this month, which would follow the BOJ’s easing of corporate funding strains in March to calm markets jolted by the health crisis.

The pandemic has disrupted supply chains and severely damaged the tourism sector while social distancing rules to contain the spread of the virus has put an additional burden on economic activity, setting Japan on course for a deep recession.






11:07 (IST)

Gold holds steady amid virus worries

Gold prices held steady as a stronger dollar countered risk-off sentiment stemming from fading optimism over signs of a slowing spread of the new coronavirus amid rising deaths.

Spot gold was steady at $1,648.84 per ounce, having risen to its highest since 10 March on Tuesday at $1,671.40.

US gold futures were also flat, at $1,683.30.

“Uncertainty continues to weigh on risk sentiment, which is positive for gold in the longer term,” Phillip Futures analysts said in a note, adding that the coronavirus “has not been completely managed.”






11:03 (IST)

IndusInd Bank up more than 37% in last two sessions

#CNBCTV18Market | IndusInd Bank continues to move higher, up more than 37% in last two sessions pic.twitter.com/wbDOjLLoio

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





11:01 (IST)

About 25 million jobs at risk with airline shutdown: IATA

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has released a new analysis showing that some 25 million jobs are at risk of disappearing with plummeting demand for air travel amid the COVID-19 crisis.

Globally, the livelihoods of some 65.5 million people are dependent on the aviation industry, including sectors such as travel and tourism. Among these are 2.7 million airline jobs.

In a scenario of severe travel restrictions lasting for three months, IATA research calculates that 25 million jobs in aviation and related sectors are endangered across the world: 11.2 million jobs in the Asia Pacific, 5.6 million jobs in Europe, 2.9 million jobs in Latin America, 2 million jobs in North America, 2 million jobs in Africa and 0.9 million jobs in the Middle East.

In the same scenario, airlines are expected to see full-year passenger revenues fall by 252 billion dollars (minus 44 percent) in 2020 as compared to 2019. 






10:56 (IST)

Market trims gains, Nifty slips below 9,000-mark

Market trimmed gains in the early morning trade as Sensex was trading 678.71 points or 2.26 percent up at 30,745.92 while Nifty was up 190.95 points or 2.17 percent at 8,983.15 at around 10.50 am.






10:50 (IST)

FCI moves about 20.19 Lakh MT food grains in 14 days

Amidst the #COVID19 lockdown FCI moves 721 rakes carrying about 20.19 Lakh MT food grains across the country in 14 days since 24th March#IndiaFightsCorona

Read here: https://t.co/dnpjx8tkEU

— PIB India 🇮🇳 #StayHome #StaySafe (@PIB_India) April 7, 2020





10:49 (IST)

About 400 million workers in India may sink into poverty: UN report

About 400 million people working in the informal economy in India are at risk of falling deeper into poverty due to the coronavirus crisis which is having ‘catastrophic consequences’, and is expected to wipe out 195 million full-time jobs or 6.7 percent of working hours globally in the second quarter of this year, the UN’s labour body has warned.

The International Labour Organisation (ILO) in its report titled ‘ILO Monitor 2nd edition: COVID-19 and the world of work’, describes coronavirus pandemic as ‘the worst global crisis since World War II’.

“Workers and businesses are facing catastrophe, in both developed and developing economies. We have to move fast, decisively, and together. The right, urgent, measures, could make the difference between survival and collapse,” ILO director-general Guy Ryder said on Tuesday.

“In India, with a share of almost 90 per cent of people working in the informal economy, about 400 million workers in the informal economy are at risk of falling deeper into poverty during the crisis. Current lockdown measures in India, which are at the high end of the University of Oxford”s COVID-19 Government Response Stringency Index, have impacted these workers significantly, forcing many of them to return to rural areas,” ILO said.






10:45 (IST)

ECoR to run two parcel express trains

he East Coast Railway (ECoR) has decided to run at least two parcel express trains to ensure quick transportation of essential commodities and goods by government agencies, NGOs and traders during the ongoing lockdown in force to contain the spread of COVID-19.

One parcel express train will run between Visakhapatnam-Sambalpur-Visakhapatnam and another between Visakhapatnam-Cuttack-Visakhapatnam, both the trains will carry essential goods to different loading and unloading points, a railway official said.

Despite the 21-day nationwide lockdown, railways have taken up the challenge to ensure uninterrupted supply of essential commodities like coal, food grains, fertilizer, petroleum products, fruits and vegetables, milk, edible oil, sugar, salt and medicine in different areas, he said.






10:44 (IST)

Rupee slips 21 paise to 75.85 against dollar

The rupee fell 21 paise to 75.85 against the US dollar in opening trade on Wednesday, as investors braced for a prolonged period of uncertainty as coronavirus cases rise.
 

Forex traders said rising brent prices and firm US dollar index weighed on the local unit.

The rupee opened weak at 75.83 at the interbank forex market and then fell further to 75.85, down 21 paise over its last close.

The rupee had settled at 75.64 against the US dollar on Tuesday. According to Reliance Securities rising brent prices and firm US Dollar Index could limit gains for the rupee.






10:40 (IST)

 Nifty trading at the highest level in 13 sessions

#CNBCTV18Market | #Nifty trading at the highest level in 13 sessions pic.twitter.com/Ru8cGv6pcI

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





10:39 (IST)

Nissan’s China sales drop 44.9% in March

Japanese automaker Nissan said on Wednesday its sales in China fell 44.9 percent from a year earlier to 73,297 units in March, as the coronavirus epidemic continues to hit the world’s biggest car market.

Nissan, which has a joint venture with Hubei-based Dongfeng Motor, said it sees “signs of recovery in the market”, according to a statement.

Rival Toyota’s China sales dropped 15.9 percent year-on-year in March while Honda’s fell 50.8 percent.






10:37 (IST)

BOJ to scale back some operations

The Bank of Japan said on Wednesday it would scale back some operations following the government’s decision to declare a state of emergency amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The central bank will continue operations crucial to social infrastructure such as issuing bank notes, making monetary policy decisions and ensuring smooth settlement of funds.

But it will scale back non-urgent operations such as long-term research and studies for academic papers. It will continue to release key economic indicators as usual, the BOJ said.






10:33 (IST)

Gujarat firms to export hydroxychloroquine to US: Vijay Rupani

With the COVID-19 outbreak creating additional demand for anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine, Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani on Tuesday said three companies from the state will export it to the United States.

In an interview to a private radio station, Rupani said his government has kept aside 1 crore hydroxychloroquine tablets to deal with any eventuality.

“Gujarat is shining the world over. US President Trump has been vigorously demanding that drug from India. Now, when the Centre has given permission for its export, Gujarat is all set to send it to the United States,” said Rupani.

“Three Gujarat-based companies have already started production of that drug to be supplied to the US. To be on the safer side, we have kept aside 1 crore tablet for our own use,” he said.






10:23 (IST)

Sensex zooms over 1,000 points, Nifty reclaims 9,000-mark

Market made sharp recovery from the opening losses as Sensex soared 1055.86 points or 3.51 percent to 31,123.07 while the broader Nifty was up 294.20 points or 3.35 percent at 9,086.40 at around 10.25 am.






10:19 (IST)

M&M surges over 4% in early trade

#CNBCTV18Market | M&M surges after co’s name appears in Credit Suisse’s list of GARP stocks pic.twitter.com/bMhCQvZ46A

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





10:17 (IST)

Nifty’s Tuesday upmove on surge in banking, pharma stocks

Sudden change in sentiment caused a rally of 9 percent in Nifty as it settled above three-digit Gann number of 871(0).

Tuesday’s upmove was driven by banking, FMCG and pharma stocks, said YES Securities. Nifty breadth turned positive with all the components settling higher.

A quick comeback from 8,100 zone implies renewed buying interest at lower levels, hence the benchmark index could complete its pending upmove towards three-digit Gann number of 901(0), the same is marked near recent high.

“Pullback moves in recent history have proved to be short-lived in nature. So, it is essential for index to surpass 9,000 mark in this week’s trade to confirm an upside shift in orbit. Failure to do so would result in price consolidation. Index’ price action took form of ‘bullish separating line’ candle pattern (i.e. it opened above previous bearish candle’s peak and trending positive through the session),” it said.






10:13 (IST)

Oil futures trade firm

Oil futures traded firm as investors await the details of a meeting scheduled for Thursday where Saudi Arabia and Russia have apparently agreed to cut production, said According to YES Securities.

“However, we very well could see more price weakness set in over the oil group later this week, especially if the proposed cuts disappoint, as we think they will give that the size of the cuts currently being bandied about (10-15 mbpd) are nowhere sufficient to balance the market,” it said.






10:11 (IST)

India’s small businesses struggle to pay wages

Hundreds of thousands of cash-starved Indian small businesses have either deferred or cut their workers’ wages this month, say industrialists and union leaders, amid a 21-day nationwide lockdown to stem the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.

All India Manufacturers Organisation (AIMO)- an industry body representing some 100,000 small manufacturers – said more than two-thirds of its members faced problems in paying salaries on Tuesday, the usual day for paying monthly wages.

“We have no funds to pay wages,” said KE Raghunathan, former national president of AIMO, who runs a solar parts’ manufacturing unit in the Southern Indian city of Chennai.

Beyond delayed payments, Indian exports have also been hit by the pandemic, and companies have faced over 50 percent cancellations in orders, said Ajay Sahai, director general of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO), nearly half of whose members are small businesses.






10:07 (IST)

Rupee opens slightly lower against dollar

#Rupee opens slightly lower against Tuesday’s close pic.twitter.com/REeVXBOg61

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





10:05 (IST)

Some firms resume operations

 

Maruti Suzuki said it produced 92,540 units in March 2020 against 1,36,201 units in March 2019. 

Galaxy Surfactants said it had partially resumed operations at its plants with effect from 6 April, 2020.

Hero MotoCorp extends the duration of all its warranty and free services in view of COVID-19 lockdown.

Wipro will release the earnings for the quarter and year ended 31 March 2020, on 15 April.






10:02 (IST)

Oil prices jump on hopes for OPEC, Russia meeting on output cuts

Oil bounced back on Wednesday, with US crude jumping over $1, lifted by hopes that a meeting between OPEC members and allied producers on Thursday will trigger output cuts to shore up prices that have crumbled amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Brent crude was up by 75 cents, or 2.4 percent, at $32.62 per barrel after falling 3.6 percent on Tuesday. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $1.30, or 5.5 percent, to $24.93 a barrel after dropping 9.4 percent in the previous session.






10:01 (IST)

Oil prices jump on hopes for OPEC, Russia meeting on output cuts

Oil bounced back on Wednesday, with US crude jumping over $1, lifted by hopes that a meeting between OPEC members and allied producers on Thursday will trigger output cuts to shore up prices that have crumbled amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Brent crude was up by 75 cents, or 2.4 percent, at $32.62 per barrel after falling 3.6 percent on Tuesday. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $1.30, or 5.5 percent, to $24.93 a barrel after dropping 9.4 percent in the previous session.






09:55 (IST)

Sensex jumps over 500 points, Nifty above 8,900-mark

The market staged a comeback from the opening losses as Sensex jumped 522.06 points or 1.74 percent to 30,589.27 while the broader Nifty was up 163.50 points or 1.86 percent at 8,955.70 at around 9.50 am.

Mahindra & Mahindra and HUL were the top gainers in the Sensex pack.






09:52 (IST)

ICRA revises rating of Va Tech Wabag

ICRA has revised its long term fund based facilities rating of the company to ICRA A (Negative) from ICRA A+ (Negative).






09:49 (IST)

Pharma stocks trade high

#CNBCTV18Market | These three pharma stocks are trading at 52-week highs pic.twitter.com/CWBYSVAsSx

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





09:47 (IST)

Nifty Bank up

#CNBCTV18Market | Nifty Bank now up more than 400 points from lows pic.twitter.com/dfQDaMqseH

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





09:39 (IST)

Sensex gains over 600 points

#CNBCTV18Market | #Sensex gains more than 600 points from opening lows pic.twitter.com/ZIN1C6UYFN

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





09:38 (IST)

FII and DII buys

According to NSE data, Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) were buyers of domestic stocks to the tune of Rs 741.77 crore on Tuesday.

Domestic institutional investors (DIIs) were net buyers to the tune of Rs 422.51 crore.






09:34 (IST)

Hindalco, Maruti among top losers

#CNBCTV18Market | Hindalco along with auto names top the list of #Nifty losers in the opening hour pic.twitter.com/dtAOYWBPfK

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





09:33 (IST)

Layoffs, closures to wipe out 6.7% of working hours worldwide: ILO

Workplace disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic are expected to wipe out labour equivalent to the effort of 195 million full-time workers, or 6.7% of hours clocked worldwide, in the second quarter of this year, the International Labour Organization (ILO) said on Tuesday.

More than four out of five workers globally are affected by full or partial closures, it said in a report.

The UN agency welcomed fiscal and monetary measures applied so far but urged countries to take steps to keep people connected to jobs they are no longer able to do, so fewer will end up unemployed.

“What we do now in terms of maintaining that relationship between workers and their enterprises to keep them on the labour market, that will pay dividends when it comes to the trajectory and the gradient of recovery hopefully in the latter part of this year,” ILO director-general Guy Ryder told a news conference.






09:31 (IST)

Markets open on weak note

#CNBCTV18Market | #Sensex, #Nifty and Nifty Bank open with cuts of 1% each. Midcap Index down 0.3% in opening tick. Market breadth remains in favour of advances pic.twitter.com/onZCkPcFab

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





09:30 (IST)

Oil prices jump on hopes for OPEC, Russia meeting

Oil bounced back on Wednesday, with U.S. crude jumping over $1, lifted by hopes that a meeting between OPEC members and allied producers on Thursday will trigger output cuts to shore up prices that have crumbled amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Brent crude was up by 75 cents, or 2.4 percent , at $32.62 per barrel by 0246 GMT after falling 3.6 percent on Tuesday. US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude rose $1.30, or 5.5 percent , to $24.93 a barrel after dropping 9.4 percent in the previous session.

Thursday’s videoconference meeting between members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its allies, including Russia, is widely expected to be more successful than their gathering in early March. That ended in failure to extend cuts, and a price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia amid slumping demand.

But doubts remain over the role of the United States in any production curbs.






09:19 (IST)

Coronavirus Outbreak: Q4 performance of IT companies to be impacted

#CNBCTV18Market | Impact of COVID-19 on Q4 performance & bookings likely to be limited for IT companies; expect sharply lower & wider range for FY21/Q1 growth guidance, says Jefferies pic.twitter.com/vFQQHFbIzI

— CNBC-TV18 (@CNBCTV18Live) April 8, 2020





09:14 (IST)

Wall Street volatility raises fears of another sell-off

The evaporation of a rally on Wall Street in the closing minutes of Tuesday’s session shows that many investors fear the US stock market is in danger of a renewed tumble due to uncertainty surrounding the coronavirus pandemic.

Fueled by early signs of the outbreak plateauing in some US hot spots, including New York State, the S&P 500 traded up as much as 3.5 percent during the session, only to lose ground sharply late in the day to finish down 0.16 percent. The index, however, remains up 19 percent from its 23 March low.

Much of Wall Street’s recent recovery has been thanks to a $2 trillion package aimed at stimulating the economy as much of the country hibernates to slow the spread of the coronavirus.






09:08 (IST)

Stock market indices trade high

The Sensex was up 160.32 points or 0.53 percent at 30227.53, at 09:01 AM.

The Nifty was up 48.95 points or 0.56 percent at 8841.15.

Stock Market Today LIVE Updates: Benchmark indices off opening lows; Mahindra surges, Cipla among top gainers

Asian stock futures were under pressure on Wednesday after a late, sharp sell-off on Wall Street and as oil prices slumped under pressure from swelling global supplies.

Hong Kong futures were down following two days of gains. Australian shares were expected to open lower as warnings of an economic slump and a spike in unemployment due to the coronavirus pandemic dampened sentiment.

Nikkei futures were down 0.37 percent at 2319 GMT. The Nikkei 225 index closed up 4.24 percen at 18,576.3​ on Tuesday as the Japanese government promised a near-$1 trillion stimulus package – equal to a fifth of its gross domestic product – to address the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

The S&P 500 lost 4.27 points, or 0.16 percent, to 2,659.41, closing near its session lows and giving up an earlier gain of as much as 3.5 percent on Tuesday. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 25.98 points, or 0.33 percent, to 7,887.26 and Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 26.13 points, or 0.12 percent, to 22,653.86.

After US stock markets closed, President Donald Trump said the United States may be getting to the top of the coronavirus curve.

Representational image. News18

The Trump administration asked Congress for an additional $250 billion in emergency economic aid for small US businesses reeling from the pandemic.

New York state, the US epicenter of COVID-19, is nearing a plateau in the number of patients hospitalized, Governor Andrew Cuomo said, a hopeful sign even as deaths in his state and neighboring New Jersey hit single-day highs.

The novel coronavirus has infected more than 1.3 million people and killed over 76,000 globally, the latest figures compiled by Reuters show. Though the numbers are still rising in many highly populated countries, tentative improvements have given hope.

“While the virus’ ‘curve is flattening’, the economic effects of the corona crisis will linger for years in our view,” Commonwealth Bank of Australia economist Joseph Capurso said in a morning note.

“Economies will take time to re‑open, some businesses will not re‑open, and unemployment will take years to return to levels reported at the end of 2019.”

Oil prices also gave up early gains to fall sharply as weekly data showed a crude glut grew more than expected. Hopes the world’s biggest producers would agree to cut output were overtaken by anxiety that a deal would not emerge.

Gold prices retreated after touching a 3-1/2-week high, in response to a stabilization in Asian and European equities trade.

Demand for gold, seen as a store of value, has jumped in recent weeks as governments around the world roll out stimulus packages that effectively dilute their currencies.

Debt trading conditions remain challenging but some measures of liquidity in the $17 trillion US Treasury market are almost back to normal, thanks to the Federal Reserve’s giant purchases.

Without the Fed’s intervention, analysts have been concerned that liquidity would rupture and market volatility would spike again. The Fed has bought more than $1 trillion in Treasuries over the last three weeks, helping calm markets.

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Updated Date: Apr 08, 2020 12:02:51 IST

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