Rising crude oil prices and geopolitical uncertainty weigh heavily on investor sentiment across Dalal Street
Indian equity markets suffered their sharpest decline in more than two months on Wednesday as escalating tensions in the Middle East sparked a broad-based sell-off, with investors reacting to soaring oil prices and growing concerns over the global economic outlook.
The benchmark BSE Sensex closed more than 2 per cent lower, while the NSE Nifty 50 also posted losses exceeding 2 per cent. The decline wiped out an estimated ₹8 lakh crore in investor wealth as selling pressure spread across nearly all major sectors.
Markets came under pressure after renewed military escalation involving the United States and Iran raised fears of prolonged instability in the Gulf region. The developments pushed Brent crude prices above $79 a barrel, heightening concerns for India, which imports the majority of its crude oil requirements. Higher energy prices are expected to increase inflationary pressures, widen the trade deficit and raise costs for businesses.
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Financial stocks led the decline, while information technology, automobile, consumer goods and oil-sensitive sectors also recorded significant losses
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Aviation and manufacturing companies were among those hit hardest as investors assessed the impact of higher fuel costs on profitability
The weakness in Indian equities reflected a broader decline across global markets, with major indices in the Gulf, Europe and parts of Asia also ending lower amid heightened geopolitical uncertainty. Investors shifted towards safer assets while monitoring developments around energy supplies and shipping routes through the strategically important Strait of Hormuz.
Market analysts described the sharp fall as a reaction to rising geopolitical risk rather than a deterioration in domestic economic fundamentals. They said investor sentiment is likely to remain volatile in the near term, with attention focused on further developments in the Middle East, movements in crude oil prices and the upcoming corporate earnings season.




