Sensex, Nifty Snap 5-Day Rally as Oil Prices, Iran Tensions Spook Investors

Indian equity benchmarks, the Sensex and Nifty, fell sharply, ending a five-day winning streak due to rising oil prices and geopolitical uncertainty surrounding the US-Iran ceasefire. Selling pressure was broad-based, with banking stocks being major drags, while metal stocks provided some support. Despite the weakness in frontline indices, the broader mid-cap and small-cap segments showed resilience and ended in positive territory. Market experts cited profit-booking after the recent rally and cautioned that the Nifty needs to sustain above 24,000 to confirm bullish strength.

Key Points: Sensex, Nifty Fall on Oil Rally, Geopolitical Tensions

  • Benchmarks snap 5-day rally
  • Oil prices, Iran tensions weigh
  • Banking stocks drag indices
  • Broader mid, small caps show resilience
2 min read

Sensex, Nifty fall as oil rally breaks 5-day winning streak

Indian stock markets ended a 5-day winning streak as rising oil prices and US-Iran ceasefire uncertainty triggered profit booking and volatility.

"A decisive and sustained move above 24,000 is required to improve sentiment and confirm strength - Market Analyst"

Mumbai, April 9

Indian equity benchmarks declined on Thursday, snapping their five-day gaining streak, as rising oil prices and uncertainty around the US-Iran ceasefire weighed on investor sentiment.

The Nifty closed 0.93 per cent lower, falling 222.25 points to settle at 23,775.10. The Sensex also slipped sharply, ending 1.20 per cent or 931.25 points down at 76,631.65.

Commenting on Nifty technical outlook, experts said that the intraday charts showed price action remained range-bound with a slight negative bias, marked by the formation of lower highs, indicating sustained selling pressure throughout the session.

"A decisive and sustained move above 24,000 is required to improve sentiment and confirm strength, while failure to hold above 23,600 could expose the index to further downside pressure," an analyst stated.

Selling pressure was seen in key frontline stocks, with Jio Financial Services, InterGlobe Aviation, and Larsen & Toubro emerging among the top losers in the Nifty pack.

Despite the weakness in benchmark indices, broader markets showed resilience. The Nifty MidCap and Nifty SmallCap indices managed to end in positive territory, gaining 0.25 per cent and 0.20 per cent respectively.

On the sectoral front, banking stocks dragged the market lower, with the Nifty Private Bank and Nifty Bank indices underperforming their peers.

In contrast, metal stocks provided some support, with the Nifty Metal index emerging as the top sectoral gainer.

Investor sentiment remained cautious amid rising geopolitical tensions. Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf expressed deep distrust toward the United States, citing repeated violations of agreements.

He pointed to Israel's continued attacks on Lebanon and reported drone activity in Iranian airspace as reasons for the strained situation, according to a statement shared on social media.

Experts stated that the renewed concerns over the stability of the ceasefire and the uptick in oil prices added to market volatility, leading to profit booking after the recent rally.

Meanwhile, the Indian rupee's five-day rally came to a grinding halt, retreating in tandem with its Asian peers.

"Spot USDINR is expected to trade within a range of 92.50 to 93.40, as traders balance global energy risks and domestic capital outflows," a market expert stated.

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Rising oil prices are always bad news for India's import bill and inflation. The government needs to seriously fast-track our renewable energy plans. We can't keep our economy hostage to global geopolitics every few months.
A
Aman W
Sensex down 900+ points is a sharp fall, yaar. But the article itself says broader markets held up. Maybe the big money is just rotating from large caps to mid/small caps for now. Metal stocks doing well is interesting.
S
Sarah B
Watching from the US, it's clear how interconnected everything is. Tensions in the Middle East hit oil, which hits emerging markets like India hardest. Hope the ceasefire holds for everyone's sake.
V
Vikram M
The RBI has its work cut out with the rupee falling again. A range of 92.50 to 93.40 for USDINR is quite wide, shows the uncertainty. Let's see if they intervene to prevent a sharp depreciation.
K
Karthik V
Respectfully, the media focuses too much on daily movements. For long-term investors, these are just noise. The fundamentals of the Indian economy are strong. Stay invested, stay disciplined. 📈

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50