A wave of selling hit Dalal Street on Friday, as investors turned cautious amid lingering uncertainty around the Iran conflict despite US President Donald Trump halting strikes on Iran’s energy sites until April 6.
The , with markets closing sharply lower.
The Sensex ended 1,690 points, or around 2.2%, lower at 73,581, while the Nifty 50 slipped below the 22,900 mark to close near 22,828.
The sharp fall wiped out nearly Rs 8.5 lakh crore in investor wealth, reflecting the intensity of the sell-off.
Trump’s pause in escalation initially raised hopes that tensions could ease. But there has been no real breakthrough. Iran has pushed back, and military activity in the region continues.
Markets are reacting less to announcements and more to the lack of a clear outcome.
There was also a catch-up effect. Indian markets were shut on Thursday for Ram Navami, while global markets reacted in real time. Asian markets declined and US markets turned volatile. When Indian markets reopened, they had to adjust to that sentiment.
The bigger concern remains crude oil.
Prices have climbed back towards the $108–110 per barrel range, which has direct implications for an import-dependent economy like India.
The government has cut excise duty on petrol and diesel by Rs 10 per litre to ease some of that pressure. But the move only limits the immediate impact and does not change the broader trend of elevated global oil prices.
“The spike in Brent crude back to around $108 will trigger another round of risk-off in the Indian market,” said V K Vijayakumar.
If crude remains elevated, the pressure on inflation, corporate margins and the currency will persist, something markets have already started factoring in.
The sell-off was broad-based.
Heavyweights dragged the indices lower, with Reliance Industries falling over 4%, while HDFC Bank dropped more than 3%. Larsen & Toubro also declined over 2%.
Financials such as ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and SBI were also in the red, while auto and consumption names like Maruti and Titan traded lower.
There were limited pockets of resilience. ONGC gained as crude prices rose, while defensive names like TCS and Sun Pharma saw relatively smaller declines.
When large-cap stocks fall together, it signals a clear shift in sentiment.
Markets are not reacting to a single event. They are adjusting to a situation where uncertainty remains high and key risks, especially oil, have not eased.
The recent rally was built on expectations that tensions would cool. That assumption is now being reassessed.
If crude prices stay elevated and geopolitical tensions persist, volatility is likely to continue. If conditions stabilise, markets could recover just as quickly.
For now, the direction is being driven by global cues rather than domestic triggers.
