opened sharply lower on Wednesday morning, with the falling 163 points to 23,455 from its previous close of 23,618, while the Sensex dropped 495 points to trade at 74,705 against its previous close of 75,200. The selloff came on the back of rising US Treasury yields, elevated crude oil prices, and a touching fresh record lows.
t crude held above $110 a barrel, with July futures at $110.76, even as US President Donald Trump signalled the Iran war could end soon. WTI crude traded at $103.82. On the domestic Multi Commodity Exchange, June crude futures rose 0.63 per cent to ₹10,090. Rajesh Palviya of Axis Direct noted that “gold remains elevated near $4,500, silver hovers around $74…while Brent crude continues to hold above $110 — an unfavorable setup for inflation and currency stability.”
The 30-year US Treasury yield climbed to 5.18 per cent, approaching levels last seen in 2007, after three consecutive sessions of losses on Wall Street. The S&P 500 fell 0.67 per cent and the Nasdaq dropped 0.8 per cent overnight. Devarsh Vakil of HDFC Securities said the surge in yields is driven by “persistent inflation concerns linked to ongoing geopolitical conflicts and a shift in Federal Reserve expectations from potential rate cuts to a possible hike later in 2026.”
The weakened to a fresh record low of 96.61 before recovering slightly to 96.54. Ponmudi R of Enrich Money flagged the currency as a serious concern, warning of “mounting pressure on inflation, import costs and broader economic stability” from crude prices holding above $100 per barrel.
Only three stocks gained on the Nifty 50 in early trade. led gainers, rising 1.26 per cent to ₹1,061.50. added 0.50 per cent to ₹2,338.70, while edged up 0.02 per cent to ₹1,197.10. Hariprasad K of Livelong Wealth noted that IT stocks “are likely to remain supported by persistent weakness in the Indian rupee, as a depreciating domestic currency improves earnings visibility for export-oriented businesses.”
On the losing side, fell the most, declining 2.26 per cent to ₹204.56. dropped 1.82 per cent to ₹6,757.50, slipped 1.72 per cent to ₹242.97, fell 1.50 per cent to ₹1,409.90, and M&M declined 1.46 per cent to ₹3,047.
In banking, the sector remained under pressure. Aakash Shah of Choice Equity Broking noted that Bank Nifty’s RSI “slipped to the 40 mark with a bearish crossover, while the MACD continued to remain below both the signal and zero lines.” Immediate support for Bank Nifty was placed at 52,800–52,200, with resistance near 54,600–55,000. Hariprasad K highlighted divergence within financials, with private banks like Kotak Mahindra Bank and ICICI Bank showing “relatively stronger resilience due to healthier balance sheets,” while PSU banks remained under pressure from elevated bond yields.
India VIX declined 4.87 per cent to 18.67 but remained elevated. Analysts said the volatility index needs to fall decisively below 18 for broader confidence to return. The Nifty Put-Call Ratio stood at 1.10, down from 1.24 in the previous session.
Gaurav Udani of ThinCredBlu Securities said traders should “avoid aggressive longs at the open, and stay focused on disciplined, level-based execution,” with 23,400 as the immediate level to watch. A break below that, analysts warned, could push the index toward 23,100. On the upside, 23,800 remains the key resistance. Shrikant Chouhan of Kotak Securities added that “short-term market texture is non-directional, and range-bound activity is likely to continue in the near future.”
Investors are also watching Nvidia’s first-quarter earnings, due after Wednesday’s US market close, for signals on AI chip demand and broader technology sector direction.
