Mumbai: The Indian equity markets faced a brutal sell-off on Tuesday, May 12, as the benchmark Sensex plummeted 1,456 points to close at 74,559, while the Nifty 50 dropped 436 points to finish at 23,379. This marks the fourth consecutive session of significant losses, a period during which the Sensex has surrendered approximately 3,500 points and the Nifty has retreated by nearly 1,000 points. The widespread panic among investors was primarily fueled by a combination of surging energy costs, geopolitical instability, and a relentless exodus of foreign capital, leaving virtually no sector unscathed in the day’s trading.
Sectoral performance was particularly grim for the high-weightage IT and Realty spaces, which bore the brunt of the afternoon’s selling pressure. Major technology giants including TCS, Infosys, Tech Mahindra, and HCL Tech saw their share prices tumble by as much as 4.5 per cent, significantly weighing down the broader indices. Other key sectors such as automotive, financial services, FMCG, and both public and private banking also witnessed declines of up to 2.5 per cent as market participants scrambled to de-risk their portfolios ahead of crucial economic data releases.
External factors played a decisive role in the market’s downward trajectory, with Brent crude prices rising nearly one per cent to reach 105 dollars per barrel. Given that India relies heavily on oil imports, this surge has heightened fears of domestic inflation and a strained fiscal deficit. Adding to the unease are escalating tensions between the United States and Iran, following recent statements from the Trump administration that have cast a shadow of uncertainty over global trade and regional stability. This geopolitical friction has triggered a flight to safety, evidenced by foreign institutional investors offloading shares worth over 8,437 crore rupees on Monday alone, contributing to a total sell-off of more than 18,724 crore rupees over the past week.
The domestic currency also added to the list of economic concerns, with the Indian rupee hitting a historic low of 95.5 against the US dollar. This depreciation, combined with a rising India VIX—the market’s “fear gauge”—which climbed two per cent to 18.87, suggests that volatile sessions may persist in the near term. Investors are now anxiously awaiting the April retail inflation data expected this evening, fearing that the recent spike in oil prices will manifest in higher consumer costs. While global markets in the US showed slight gains previously, the current weakness in Asian peers like South Korea’s Kospi indicates that the path to recovery for Dalal Street remains clouded by international headwinds and persistent selling by foreign funds.