Sensex Crashes 891 Points as Middle East Tensions Spook Global Markets

Indian equity benchmarks Sensex and Nifty dropped over 1% in early trade, mirroring a global risk-off sentiment triggered by escalating tensions in the Middle East involving the US, Israel, and Iran. All sectoral indices traded in the red, with realty, oil & gas, and auto sectors leading the losses, while midcap and smallcap indices also fell sharply. Analysts noted that the heightened uncertainty is likely to suppress risk appetite, with aviation stocks under particular pressure due to flight suspensions in the region. The sell-off was part of a broader global decline, with Asian markets like Hong Kong and Japan also falling, and crude oil prices surging over 7% on fears of supply disruption.

Key Points: Sensex, Nifty Fall Over 1% on Middle East War Fears

  • Sensex down 891 pts
  • All sectoral indices trade in red
  • Crude oil prices jump over 7%
  • Global markets from Asia to US decline
  • Weekly expiry may intensify volatility
2 min read

Sensex, Nifty drop over 1 pc over heightened Middle East tensions

Indian markets plunged over 1% tracking global sell-off amid US-Iran-Israel tensions. All sectors in red, oil prices surge 7%. Key support levels tested.

Sensex, Nifty drop over 1 pc over heightened Middle East tensions
"heightened uncertainty in the Middle East is likely to keep risk appetite subdued - analysts"

Mumbai, March 2

The Indian equity markets opened the week sharply lower on Monday, tracking a broad risk-off sentiment across global markets due to the US, Israel and Iran war.

As of 9.28 am, Sensex lost 891 points, or 1.10 per cent, to reach 80,395 and Nifty eased 268 points, or 1.07 per cent, at 24,909.

Main broad-cap indices performed in line with the benchmark indices, as the Nifty Midcap 100 declined 1.14 per cent, and the Nifty Smallcap 100 lost 1.35 per cent.

All sectoral indices traded in red with Nifty realty, oil and gas as well as auto leading the losses, down 2.19 per cent, 1.81 per cent and 1.35 per cent, respectively.

The heightened uncertainty in the Middle East is likely to keep risk appetite subdued throughout the session, analysts said, adding aviation stocks may remain under pressure following the suspension of flights across key UAE routes, highlighting the immediate operational fallout from the regional instability, said market watchers.

Further, weekly Nifty expiry on Monday ahead of the Holi market holiday could intensify volatility, they noted.

Analysts said before the market opening that the formation of a fourth consecutive red candle in Nifty charts and recent close below the 200-day EMA already reflected increasing bearish dominance and a weakening broader trend.

Technically, resistance is placed in the 25,300-25,350 zone, while immediate support is seen at 25,000-25,050, they said.

Crude oil prices jumped more than 7 per cent, as market participants fear US-Iran war will have broader regional ramifications that will lead to a major supply disruption.

In Asian markets, airline stocks led losses as airspace closure over the Middle East and airport closures unsettled travel markets.

China's Shanghai index was flat, and Shenzhen dipped 0.75 per cent, Japan's Nikkei declined 1.5 per cent, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index plummeted 1.68 per cent. South Korea's Kospi lost 1 per cent.

The US markets ended largely in red in the last trading session, as Nasdaq declined 0.92 per cent. The S&P 500 lost 0.43 per cent, and the Dow Jones declined 1.05 per cent.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Just checked my portfolio... ouch! 😓 The realty and auto sectors getting hit hard is worrying. I was planning to book some profits before Holi, but now it's all red. Hope this is just a short-term correction and not the start of a bigger fall.
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Rohit P
Crude oil up 7% is the real killer for India. Our import bill will shoot up, putting pressure on the rupee and inflation. This Middle East tension is a perfect storm for our economy. Fingers crossed it de-escalates soon.
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Sarah B
Watching from the US. The global market interconnectivity is stark. Our indices are down too, but the immediate impact on aviation and oil seems more acute for India given its geography and dependence on Middle Eastern energy. A sobering reminder of geopolitical risks.
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Vikram M
Technical analysis was pointing to this. Four red candles and a break below the 200-day EMA is a strong bearish signal. Support at 25,000 is crucial. If it breaks, we could see a steeper fall. Might be a good time to average out for long-term investors, but cautiously.
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Kavya N
Beyond the stock market numbers, I'm worried about the people stuck due to flight suspensions. Many Indians work in the UAE and travel that route. Hope the government is making arrangements to help them. Jai Hind.
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