Sensex Crashes 1,200 Points as Geopolitical Fears Trigger Sell-Off

The Indian stock market witnessed a sharp downturn with the Sensex plummeting over 1,200 points and the Nifty falling below 25,500. The sell-off was driven by heightened geopolitical tensions between the US and Iran, which unsettled global investor sentiment. A surge in Brent crude oil prices exacerbated inflationary concerns and contributed to heightened market volatility. Analysts noted that uncertainty around US Fed policy and weak foreign institutional investor participation further intensified the selling pressure.

Key Points: Sensex Down 1,200 Points: Market Crashes on US-Iran Tensions

  • Broad-based sectoral sell-off
  • Geopolitical tensions spike volatility
  • Crude oil surge fuels inflation fears
  • Weak FII participation adds pressure
2 min read

Stock market ends on weak note, Sensex down over 1,200 points

Indian stock market plunges with Sensex down over 1,200 points amid global sell-off triggered by US-Iran tensions and crude oil surge.

"The bears took charge... as rising geopolitical tensions between the US and Iran unsettled global sentiment. - Vinod Nair"

Mumbai, February 19

The Indian stock market on Thursday ended on a weak note amid selling across the sectors with Nifty closing around 25,450.

At the time of closing, the Sensex was down 1,236.11 points or 1.48 per cent at 82,498.14 while the Nifty was down 365 points or 1.41 per cent at 25,454.35.

Around 1248 shares advanced, 2790 shares declined, and 149 shares unchanged.

Among the sectors, almost all the indices ended in the red. Heavy losses of around 2 per cent were recorded by some of the key indices including Realty, Auto, Power, Capital Goods, Consumer Durables among others.

At the time of opening, the market opened on a positive note supported by foreign inflows and continued buying interest from domestic investors. The Nifty 50 index opened at 25,873.35 with a gain of 54 points or 0.21 per cent, while the BSE Sensex opened at 83,969.82 with a gain of 235.57 points or 0.28 per cent.

Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Investments Limited said, "The bears took charge of the Indian market as rising geopolitical tensions between the US and Iran unsettled global sentiment leading to a broad based sell-off. Brent crude surged to its YTD high, exacerbating inflationary concerns and triggering heightened market volatility on fear of bottlenecking of Strait of Hormuz."

"At the same time uncertainty surrounding the US Fed's rate-cut trajectory and continued weakness in the INR impacted the domestic market. Sell-off intensified due to low FII participation because of Lunar New Year holiday across key Asian markets and a non-settlement day on account of a regional banking holiday in India," he added.

Ponmudi R, CEO of Enrich Money, said, "Indian equity markets witnessed a sharp decline today amid broad-based selling across sectors, mirroring weakness in global equities. Heightened uncertainty surrounding the outcome of US-Iran negotiations has amplified concerns over the risk of a potential military escalation, raising the prospect of a wider Middle East conflict and weighing heavily on investor sentiment."

"Elevated index valuations at higher levels further encouraged institutional distribution rather than aggressive accumulation, adding to the downside pressure. Weakness across key large-cap segments dragged the broader indices lower, reflecting a clear shift in market tone--from momentum-driven buying to a more defensive, capital-preservation stance."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Feeling the pinch today! My portfolio is deep in the red. 😓 It's frustrating when global tensions thousands of miles away impact our savings so directly. Hope the situation with Iran and US de-escalates soon for everyone's sake.
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Vikram M
The experts are right about valuations being high. Sensex at 83k+ felt a bit unreal. Maybe this correction was needed. Time to do some careful shopping for fundamentally strong stocks that have fallen more than the index.
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Arjun K
The real worry is crude oil prices. If Brent stays high, our import bill shoots up, inflation comes back, and RBI might delay rate cuts. That's a triple whammy for the economy. Government needs to have a solid plan for energy security.
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Sarah B
Watching from the US. It's interesting to see how interconnected global markets are now. The Fed's decisions and Middle East politics cause ripples all the way to Dalal Street. Hope Indian retail investors aren't panicking.
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Karthik V
Respectfully, while the global factors are valid, I feel our markets are also reacting to domestic uncertainty. The upcoming elections always bring volatility. Combined with high valuations, it was a perfect storm for a sell-off.
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Nisha Z

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