Key Points

Indian stock markets faced heavy selling pressure as the August 1 deadline for the India-US trade deal approaches. The Sensex dropped 572 points, with realty and banking stocks leading the decline, while pharma stocks showed resilience. Analysts attribute the slump to weak quarterly earnings, foreign investor outflows, and uncertainty over trade negotiations. Despite global market optimism, domestic sentiment remains cautious ahead of key central bank decisions.

Key Points: Sensex Drops 572 Points as India-US Trade Deal Deadline Looms

  • Sensex falls 572 points as August 1 US tariff deadline nears
  • Pharma stocks outperform while realty and banks decline
  • Analysts cite weak Q1 earnings and FII outflows as key concerns
  • Global markets stay positive amid US-EU trade optimism
2 min read

Indian stocks under pressure as uncertainty prevails as August 1 tariff deadline nears; Sensex down over 500 points

Indian stocks tumble amid uncertainty over US trade deal deadline, weak earnings, and FII outflows. Pharma stocks show resilience while realty and banks lag.

"Domestic market sentiment remains cautious due to weak earnings, trade delays, and FII outflows. – Vinod Nair, Geojit Investments"

New Delhi, July 28

Equity benchmarks have settled substantially lower on Monday, kicking off the week on a dampening note.

The benchmark indices continued to face selling pressure at higher levels, with analysts indicating that the India-US new interim deal is unlikely to be finalised before the August 1 deadline. On Sunday, the US administration indicated that the August 1 deadline wouldn't be extended further.

Sensex closed at 80,891.02 points, down 572.07 points or 0.70 per cent, while Nifty closed at 24,680.90 points, down 156.10 points or 0.63 per cent.

Among sectors, pharma stocks provided some support with relative strength, while realty, media, banks, metals, and consumer durables were under pressure throughout the session.

Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Investments Limited, said domestic market sentiment has remained cautious, weighed down by a disappointing set of Q1 earnings, delays in the India-US trade agreement, and continued FII outflows.

"In contrast, global markets remain broadly positive, supported by US-EU trade developments that are perceived as less concerning than anticipated. The upcoming monetary policy decisions from the Fed and BoJ, along with the trajectory of domestic quarterly earnings, are expected to play a pivotal role in shaping market direction in the near term," Nair added.

According to Sudeep Shah, Head - Technical and Derivatives Research, SBI Securities, the stock indices the benchmark index Nifty closed in the red, reflecting persistent bearish sentiment across the broader market for the third straight trading session.

At a broader level, India's strong domestic fundamentals, a responsive RBI, and good monsoon conditions have been supporting the financial markets. A comfortable inflation number in India is another positive.

In 2024, Sensex and Nifty accumulated a growth of about 9-10 per cent each. In 2023, Sensex and Nifty gained 16-17 per cent, on a cumulative basis. In 2022, they gained a mere 3 per cent each.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The US always plays these games before elections! Our government should focus more on strengthening domestic demand rather than depending on foreign trade deals. Atithi Devo Bhava doesn't mean we should compromise our interests.
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Aman W
Market down by 500 points is nothing to worry about - it's just 0.7% correction. Media makes it sound like doomsday! Remember 2008 crisis? That was real panic. This is just normal market movement.
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Sarah B
As an NRI investor, I'm actually seeing this as a buying opportunity. Indian markets have strong fundamentals and this dip won't last long. Pharma stocks looking particularly attractive right now.
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Karthik V
The article mentions good monsoon - that's the real silver lining! Agriculture sector will boost rural demand which ultimately helps the economy. Stock market is just one indicator of our economic health.
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Nisha Z
While the market dip is concerning, I wish financial journalists would explain things in simpler terms. Not all of us understand terms like FII outflows or monetary policy decisions. More financial literacy needed!

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