Sensex, Nifty Plunge 1% as US-Iran Tensions Push Oil Above $105

Indian equity markets fell 1% in early trade on Monday as US-Iran tensions escalated, pushing Brent crude above $105 per barrel. The Sensex dropped 943 points to 76,384, while the Nifty fell 280 points to 23,897. All sectoral indices traded in the red, with Consumer Durables, Auto, and PSU Bank stocks down nearly 3%. PM Narendra Modi's call for austerity on fuel, gold, and edible oil added to market pressure, with experts warning of potential economic growth implications.

Key Points: Sensex, Nifty Fall 1% on US-Iran Tensions, Oil Surges

  • Sensex falls 943 points, Nifty drops 280 points in early trade
  • Brent crude surges to $105.76 on US-Iran stalemate
  • PM Modi urges austerity on fuel, gold, edible oil
  • Nifty Consumer Durables, Auto, PSU Bank fall up to 3%
  • India VIX rises 2% signaling market volatility
3 min read

Sensex, Nifty fall 1 pc in early trade as US-Iran tensions keep oil prices elevated

Indian markets fall 1% as US-Iran tensions push oil above $105. Sensex drops 943 pts, Nifty below 23,900. PM Modi urges austerity. Key stocks hit.

"This call for austerity carries slightly negative implications for economic growth in FY27. - Market Expert"

Mumbai, May 11

Indian equity markets traded cautiously on Monday, with benchmark indices falling 1 per cent each in early trade after the US and Iran failed to reach an agreement on a peace proposal related to the West Asia conflict.

Sensex declined as much as 943 points or 1.22 per cent to hit an intraday low of 76,384 in morning trade, while Nifty fell 280 points or 1.15 per cent to 23,897.

Sectorally, all indices traded in the red, with Nifty Consumer Durables, Nifty Auto, Nifty PSU Bank, Nifty Private Bank, Nifty Oil & Gas and Nifty Chemicals falling up to nearly 3 per cent.

Among Nifty stocks, Titan, IndiGo, M&M, Shriram Finance, Eternal, Maruti Suzuki, Bajaj Auto, Bajaj Finserv, Bharti Airtel, HDFC Life, Eicher Motors and Dr Reddy's Laboratories were among the top laggards.

Moreover, India VIX -- the market volatility gauge -- rose nearly 2 per cent to 10.7.

Earlier in the session, the Sensex opened at 76,638.09, down 690.10 points or 0.89 per cent. Similarly, the 50-scrip basket opened nearly 200 points lower or 0.85 per cent down at 23,970.10.

According to a market expert, equities are likely to face pressure from two major headwinds on Monday.

"One, hopes of a resolution to the West Asia crisis have faded again following President Trump's rejection of Iran's response. Consequently, Brent crude has surged to $105, potentially worsening the current account deficit," the expert said.

The expert further noted that Prime Minister Narendra Modi's appeal to curb the consumption of fuel, gold, chemical fertilisers and edible oil, while discouraging avoidable foreign travel, reflects a crisis-management response to rising pressure on the current account deficit due to elevated crude prices.

"This call for austerity carries slightly negative implications for economic growth in FY27. Industries linked to petroleum, fertilisers, gold, aviation, hotels and related sectors are likely to face sentiment-driven pressure. Defensive sectors such as pharmaceuticals may remain resilient," the expert added.

US President Donald Trump, on a social media platform, said, "I have just read the response from Iran's so-called 'Representatives.' I don't like it - TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE! Thank you for your attention to this matter."

Hopes of an imminent resolution to the 10-week-long US-Iran conflict -- which could have reopened oil transit through the Strait of Hormuz -- faded after Trump's remark.

In commodities, Brent crude rose 4.41 per cent to $105.76 per barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) gained 5.12 per cent to $100.31 per barrel.

Meanwhile, Asian markets traded mixed. Japan's Nikkei and Hong Kong's Hang Seng were down 0.3 per cent each, while South Korea's KOSPI rose over 4 per cent.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Aditya G
Market was already overvalued in my opinion. This correction was long overdue. But I'm concerned about fuel prices and inflation which directly impact household budgets. If crude stays above $100 for long, we'll see petrol prices crossing ₹120/litre again. That's brutal for the middle class.
A
Aryan P
People need to understand this is a temporary blip. India's fundamentals are strong. FIIs will come back once the West Asia situation settles. The call for austerity by PM Modi is actually sensible - reduce unnecessary consumption, focus on self-reliance. Made in India will help in long term.
T
Tanvi S
This is exactly why we need to diversify our energy sources. We import way too much crude. Solar, nuclear, hydro should be the priority. Every time there's tension in Gulf, we suffer. Also, why is govt not using strategic petroleum reserves more aggressively to stabilise prices? 🤔
J
Jessica F
As someone who has been tracking markets for over a decade, this fear is overblown. India is not in 2013 CAD crisis territory. Our forex reserves are healthy, and RBI has enough tools. Defensives like pharma and IT holding up well. Good time to buy quality stocks on dips if you're a long-term investor.
N
Naveen S
It's frustrating to see markets so reactive to Trump's tweets. One statement and everything drops. But honestly, the real problem is structural - we need to reduce our dependence on Gulf oil. Also, the auto sector is getting hammered, which affects so many jobs in India. Hope situation normalises soon.

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