Sensex Crashes 1,312 Points, Nifty Below 24,000 on Trump-Iran Tensions

Indian equity markets saw sharp selling on Monday with the Sensex closing 1,312 points lower and the Nifty slipping below the 24,000 mark. The decline was triggered by renewed Gulf tensions after former US President Donald Trump reportedly rejected Iran's peace proposal. Market expert Vinod Nair noted that investor sentiment weakened due to geopolitical concerns and rising crude oil prices near $103 per barrel. Prime Minister Narendra Modi appealed to citizens to conserve energy and avoid non-essential foreign travel amid the crisis.

Key Points: Sensex Plunges 1,312 pts, Nifty Below 24,000 on Iran Tensions

  • Sensex falls 1,312 pts (1.70%), Nifty below 24,000
  • Trump rejects Iran peace proposal, Gulf tensions rise
  • Crude oil near $103/bbl, concerns for Indian economy
  • PM Modi urges energy conservation, avoid non-essential travel
2 min read

Sensex closes 1,312 pts down, Nifty slips below 24,000 as Trump rejects Iran's peace proposal

Sensex drops 1,312 pts, Nifty below 24,000 as Trump rejects Iran peace proposal. Crude near $103/bbl. Modi urges energy conservation. Market fears rise.

"The benchmark index slipped below the 24,000 mark as renewed Gulf tensions, following Trump's rejection of Iran's peace proposal, weighed on investor sentiment - Vinod Nair"

Mumbai, May 11

Indian equity markets witnessed sharp selling pressure on Monday as renewed tensions in the Gulf region and concerns over rising crude oil prices weighed heavily on investor sentiment.

The Nifty 50 index closed at 23,815.85, down 360.30 points or 1.49 per cent, while the BSE Sensex settled at 76,015.28, declining 1,312.91 points or 1.70 per cent.

Market experts said investor sentiment weakened after fresh geopolitical concerns in West Asia and rising worries over the impact of elevated crude oil prices on India's economy.

Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Investments said the benchmark indices slipped sharply following renewed Gulf tensions after former US President Donald Trump reportedly rejected Iran's peace proposal.

"The benchmark index slipped below the 24,000 mark as renewed Gulf tensions, following Trump's rejection of Iran's peace proposal, weighed on investor sentiment," Nair said.

He added that the cautious mood in the market deepened after Prime Minister Narendra Modi appealed to citizens to conserve energy and avoid non-essential foreign travel.

According to Nair, investors are reassessing the possible economic impact of higher crude oil prices, weakness in the Indian rupee and pressure on the current account deficit.

"At present, India's strong fiscal position and healthy forex reserves are helping the government to absorb the impact of elevated crude prices. However, prolonged geopolitical tensions could increase macroeconomic stress," he said.

He further added that rising bond yields and continued foreign institutional investor (FII) outflows are likely to keep markets range-bound in the near term.

Sector-wise, selling pressure was visible across most indices on the National Stock Exchange (NSE).

Nifty Consumer Durables emerged as the worst-performing sector, declining more than 3 per cent during the session.

Nifty PSU Bank fell 2.52 per cent, while Nifty Media declined 2.49 per cent and Nifty Auto slipped 1.86 per cent. Nifty IT also closed lower by 0.22 per cent. Among major sectors, only FMCG and Pharma managed to end the session with gains.

Crude oil prices remained elevated amid the ongoing geopolitical tensions in West Asia. Brent crude prices were trading around USD 103 per barrel at the time of filing this report.

In Asian markets, most major indices closed in positive territory except Japan. Japan's Nikkei 225 index ended lower by 0.38 per cent at 62,479. Singapore's Straits Times index gained 0.42 per cent to close at 4,942, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index edged up 0.06 per cent to settle at 26,410. Taiwan's weighted index also rose 0.45 per cent to close at 41,790.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Honestly, I saw this coming. Trump's hawkish stance on Iran always rattles markets. But it's sad that PSU Banks and Consumer Durables fell so much—my parents invested in some of those for retirement. Hope the FM announces something to calm nerves.
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Vikram M
Nifty below 24,000—that's a psychological blow. As someone who trades actively, I've gone into cash mode. The PM's appeal to conserve energy is sensible, but it also hints the government is worried about prolonged pressure. Until crude cools off, I'm staying cautious.
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Ananya R
Why does everything have to be about Trump and Iran? 😩 Our economy is more resilient than that. Look at FMCG and Pharma—they're still up! That tells me fundamentals are strong, it's just panic selling. Buy the dip, I say. The Modi government has handled bigger crises before.
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Rohit P
As an IT professional, I'm a bit relieved Nifty IT only fell 0.22%—still, overall sentiment is grim. FIIs are pulling out, bond yields are rising—this is not a great time for new investors. I'm holding my positions but not adding right now. Patience is key.
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Kavya N
Has anyone calculated the real impact on common people? Petrol will go up, transport costs rise, and then everything from vegetables to online shopping gets more expensive. The market fall is a sign of deeper problems. The government should negotiate with Iran separately to secure oil supply.

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