Indian Markets Extend Losses to Fourth Day as Nifty Breaks Below 25,700

Indian equity benchmarks extended their losing streak to a fourth consecutive session, with the Sensex falling over 600 points and the Nifty closing below 25,700. Analysts attribute the weakness to poor global cues, persistent foreign institutional investor outflows, and rising geopolitical tensions. Sectoral performance was mixed, with PSU Banks and IT showing strength while Realty and Private Banks faced significant selling pressure. Market sentiment remains cautious ahead of key domestic inflation data and amid ongoing uncertainty surrounding global trade negotiations.

Key Points: Stock Market Falls for 4th Day: Nifty Below 25,700, Sensex Down 600 Pts

  • Fourth straight session of losses
  • Nifty closes below 25,700
  • Weakness in Realty and Private Banks
  • Caution ahead of domestic inflation data
  • Geopolitical tensions weigh on sentiment
3 min read

Stock market ends lower on fourth consecutive session, Nifty below 25,700

Indian stock markets closed lower for the fourth consecutive session. Analysts cite global cues, FII outflows, and trade uncertainty. Get key insights and quotes.

"s.QUOTE: The Indian market remains in a consolidation phase due to weak global cues, rising global bond yields, and persistent FII outflows - Vinod Nair, Geojit Investments"

Mumbai, January 9

Indian stock market ended lower on the fourth consecutive session with Nifty falling below 25,700.

The Sensex was down 604.72 points or 0.72% at 83,576.24, while the Nifty was down 193.55 points or 0.75% at 25,683.30.

Among the sector, PSU Banks, Oil & Gas, IT, PSE, and Metals remained strong footed, while weakness was seen in Realty, Private Banks, Financial Services, FMCG, and Consumer Durables.

Indian rupee ended lower by 14 paise at 90.16 per dollar on Friday against previous close of 90.02.

Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Investments Limited said, "The Indian market remains in a consolidation phase due to weak global cues, rising global bond yields, and persistent FII outflows, all of which weigh on sentiment ahead of the positive Q3 earnings outlook. Domestic risk-off sentiment has intensified amid uncertainty surrounding US-India tariff negotiations and escalating geopolitical tensions."

"Nevertheless, domestic GDP growth is expected to remain strong, and Q3 results should indicate a recovery led by midcaps, potentially stabilising investor sentiment. Despite these heightened geopolitical headwinds, the market is likely to trade within a range with a mixed bias," he added.

Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money, said, "Indian equity markets remained under sustained pressure throughout the week, weighed down by elevated global trade uncertainty following renewed tariff-related remarks from U.S. President Donald Trump. The possibility of higher import duties rekindled concerns over disruptions to global trade flows, dampening risk appetite across emerging markets, including India."

"Investors clearly adopted a risk-off stance, refraining from aggressive positioning, while defensive sectors offered only limited support. Overall sentiment stayed cautious, with market participants awaiting clearer signals on global policy direction and its broader economic impact."

Rupak De, Senior Technical Analyst at LKP Securities said, "The Nifty has slipped further, moving lower from the 50 EMA, indicating increasing weakness. Bouts of selling pressure dragged the index to close at a several-day low. Market sentiment appears decisively negative. In the short term, the trend might remain weak, with potential downside towards 25,550-25,500. On the higher end, resistance is placed at 25,850."

Ashika Institutional Equities said, "On the macro front, market participants remained cautious ahead of the domestic inflation data for December, scheduled to be released on Monday. On global front Market participants stayed on the sidelines amid caution ahead of a US Supreme Court decision on the validity of American tariffs. Sentiment was further dented after US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick indicated on Friday that the India-US trade agreement had been delayed. On the derivatives front, market breadth remained negative with 36 advancing stocks against 176 declining stocks."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The PSU banks and metals holding up is interesting. Shows maybe some domestic institutional support? But the FII outflow story is getting old now. When will they return? Our fundamentals are strong.
V
Vikram M
Global factors are dictating our market mood too much. First US yields, now their tariffs. We need our economy to be more resilient to these external shocks. Good to see the analyst mention strong domestic GDP growth though.
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Ananya R
As a small investor, this is very discouraging. Just when you think the market will go up, it falls for four days. The rupee also weakening is a double whammy. Hoping for a recovery post the inflation data.
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Sarah B
Watching from the US. The delay in the US-India trade deal is definitely spooking markets here too. It's creating uncertainty for multinationals. Hope both governments can resolve it quickly for stability.
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Karthik V
The technical analyst's view is clear - 25,500 could be the next support. Might be a good level to start SIPs for the long term. Market always gives opportunities in fear. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
M
Michael C
Respectfully, the constant focus on short-term global noise sometimes overlooks the strong structural

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