Rupee hits record low, crude bites; Nifty ends flat as IT rescues the day

spent Tuesday lurching between gains and losses before ending nearly flat, but the real story was elsewhere — , crude oil hovered near $110 a barrel, and an economy heavily dependent on energy imports found itself staring at a widening storm of macro headwinds.

“…the underlying macro pressures remain firmly unresolved. The prolonged energy crisis linked to West Asia tensions continues to worsen domestic conditions, with a sharply weaker rupee, rising inflation concerns and elevated crude oil prices collectively reinforcing a broader risk-off environment,” said Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Research, Wealth Management, Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

The closed at 75,200.85, down 114.19 points or 0.15 per cent, while the shed 31.95 points or 0.14 per cent to settle at 23,618. It was a weekly expiry session, and aggressive derivative unwinding in the final hour erased much of the day’s earlier optimism.

The one bright spot was IT. The Nifty IT index surged 3.2 per cent — its third consecutive session of gains — clocking a cumulative rise of nearly 5.7 per cent over two trading sessions.

A weaker rupee is a direct earnings tailwind for export-heavy technology companies, and institutional investors stepped in with bargain buying after months of heavy corrections in the sector.

Realty gained 1.4 per cent, while PSU Bank and Media indices advanced roughly 1 per cent each. Private banking was the primary laggard, capping the market’s upside.



The broader market, however, told a different story altogether. The Nifty Midcap 100 gained 0.91 per cent and the Smallcap 100 advanced 1.17 per cent, outperforming benchmarks by a wide margin. India VIX declined 5.45 per cent to around 18.55, signalling some cooling of immediate panic, though volatility remains historically elevated.

The rupee’s slide — its sixth consecutive session of weakness — is being driven by a confluence of factors: persistent dollar demand, elevated crude prices, a widening trade deficit, and a strengthening dollar index. The Reserve Bank of India’s interventions have offered only limited relief.

A weakening currency, combined with a recent hike in petrol and diesel prices, is stoking imported inflation fears and squeezing corporate margins.

On the geopolitical front, optimism about a potential delay in US military action against Iran briefly lifted sentiment in early trade and pulled crude off its highs.

However, , with the prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz keeping supply disruption fears alive. US Dow futures were trading lower even as European indices edged higher.

Investors were also tracking HDFC Bank, where the board is expected to appoint a new chairman before Keki Mistry’s interim tenure ends in June 2026.

Clarity on leadership is seen as critical for long-term investor confidence in the country’s largest private lender. On the earnings front, Eureka Forbes reported a strong Q4 FY26, with revenue rising 11.6 per cent year-on-year and EBITDA margin hitting a record 13.2 per cent.

“…the focus should remain on stock selection based on prevailing sectoral trends,” said Ajit Mishra, SVP Research, Religare Broking, adding that the Nifty needs to decisively reclaim the 24,000 mark before a more constructive view can emerge, with immediate support in the 23,250–23,450 zone.

The week ahead will be shaped by global cues, crude oil trajectory, and the outcome of key macro data — including the first-quarter CY2026 GDP growth rate, due later today. Until the energy crisis and currency pressure show credible signs of easing, any market recovery is likely to remain shallow and vulnerable.

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