Benchmark stock market indices opened sharply lower on Monday, with the Sensex tumbling over 1,000 points in early trade as investors reacted to surging crude oil prices, renewed tensions in West Asia and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s appeal to reduce consumption of imported goods such as petrol, diesel and gold.
The BSE was down 1016.62 points to 76,311.57at around 9:39 am, while the NSE Nifty50 slipped 297 points to trade at 23,879.15.
The , with banking, aviation, jewellery and consumption-linked stocks witnessing heavy pressure amid concerns over rising prices and their impact on India’s economy.
Market sentiment weakened after Brent crude prices surged back above the $105-per-barrel mark following renewed uncertainty surrounding the West Asia crisis.
At the same time, investors also reacted sharply to Prime Minister ’s recent appeal asking citizens to reduce consumption of petrol and diesel, avoid unnecessary foreign travel and cut dependence on imports such as gold, edible oils and chemical fertilisers.
Analysts said the comments signalled growing concern within the government over India’s import bill and current account deficit at a time when crude prices are rising sharply again.
V K Vijayakumar said markets are currently facing pressure from two major headwinds.
“The market will face pressure from two headwinds today. One, the expected resolution of the West Asia crisis has again slipped away following President Trump’s rejection of Iran’s letter. Consequently Brent crude has again spiked to $105 potentially aggravating the current account deficit,” he said.
“Two, PM Modi’s appeal to the nation to curb the consumption of petrol/diesel, gold, chemical fertilisers and edible oil and refrain from avoidable foreign travel is a crisis management response to the current account deficit problem caused by high crude prices,” Vijayakumar added.
According to him, the Prime Minister’s comments are also being interpreted by the market as a sign that economic growth could face some pressure in FY27 if consumption slows down.
“This call for austerity has slightly negative implication for economic growth in FY27. Particularly, the industries related to the austerity call like petroleum, chemical fertilisers, gold, air travel, hotel and related sectors will be sentimentally impacted,” he said.
The weakness was visible across several Nifty50 stocks in early trade.
Titan emerged among the top losers on the index, falling 5.6% to Rs 4,256.50 amid concerns around gold demand after the Prime Minister’s remarks on reducing gold consumption.
State Bank of India declined 3% to Rs 988.70, while IndiGo parent InterGlobe Aviation slipped 3.55% to Rs 4,362 as rising crude oil prices weighed on aviation stocks.
Bharti Airtel dropped 1.81%, Maruti Suzuki fell 1.73%, Bajaj Auto declined 1.56% and Reliance Industries slipped over 1%.
Banking stocks also traded under pressure, with HDFC Bank down 1.34%, Axis Bank falling 0.68% and ICICI Bank slipping 0.37%.
Broader market sentiment remained weak, with midcap and smallcap stocks also witnessing selling pressure as investors moved away from riskier assets.
However, a few defensive pockets showed resilience.
Tata Consumer Products rose 3.72% to Rs 1,220 and Apollo Hospitals gained marginally in early trade. Pharmaceutical stocks such as Sun Pharma and Cipla also traded relatively steady compared to the broader market weakness.
“Sectors like pharmaceuticals which will not be impacted in any manner will remain resilient,” Vijayakumar said.
Analysts said rising crude prices remain the biggest concern for markets because India imports a majority of its crude oil requirements. Higher oil prices can widen the current account deficit, pressure the rupee, increase imported inflation and hurt corporate margins.
Investors will now closely track crude oil movements, developments in West Asia and any further signals from the government on import management and consumption trends.
Market experts said volatility is likely to remain elevated in the near term if crude prices continue to remain above the psychologically important $100-per-barrel level.
