MUMBAI: Indian shares ended higher on Friday, reversing earlier losses, on bargain-hunting in banking stocks such as State Bank of India and HDFC Bank Ltd.

The broader NSE index closed up 0.53 percent at 10,066.40 while the benchmark BSE index ended 0.27 percent higher at 32,325.41.

Both indexes posted gains for the fifth straight week with the NSE index gaining 0.52 percent and the BSE index rising 0.05 percent.

Earlier, Indian shares fell, dragged down by Reliance Industries Ltd on profit-taking, while drugmakers declined after the US health regulator found quality lapses at a facility of Biocon Ltd.

The findings of the US Food and Drug Administration mark another blow to the Indian pharmaceutical industry, which has faced regulatory sanctions and warnings over quality control to inadequate standards.

“For healthcare companies, there are issues which are progressively getting resolved,” said Rakesh Tarway, head of research at Reliance Securities.

However, there are growth issues because of the price erosion in the US market, so healthcare companies will be under pressure for some time, he added.

Shares of Biocon fell as much as 7.6 percent, posting their biggest intraday fall in five months, after the US FDA issued 10 observations pointing at aseptic practices following an inspection at the drugmaker’s plant in Bengaluru.

Almost all constituents of the Nifty pharma index , which shed as much as 2.5 percent in what could be its third straight session of decline, were in red.

Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd dropped as much as 4.5 percent, while Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories Ltd fell over 3 percent.

Reliance Industries, the top drag on the NSE index, fell as much as 2.1 percent after two consecutive sessions of gains as investors locked in profits. The stock hit a record high on Thursday.

Meanwhile, Indian Oil Corp Ltd gained as much as 5.1 percent after the company reported better-than-expected first-quarter profit on Thursday.—Reuters