The Indian equity markets experienced major declines on Monday as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East combined with increasing oil prices to drive benchmark indexes down.
At around 11:04 AM:
The Nifty50 dropped 316 points (1.25%) to 24,862.75
The BSE Sensex plunged over 1,040 points (1.28%) to 80,246.75
The sell-off reflected global risk aversion as investors reacted to military developments involving the U. S. Israel and Iran
Oil Price Surge Weighs on Key Sectors
Analysts warned that sectors sensitive to crude oil prices would face margin pressure because of increasing input expenses. These include:
Oil marketing companies
Aviation
Paints and chemicals
Tyres
However upstream oil producers will gain from increased crude oil prices. The aerospace and electronics defence companies experience better market sentiment because of current geopolitical tensions.
Energy Risk the Biggest Concern
Market experts consider rising global crude prices to represent the greatest danger for equities. Brent crude briefly surged more than 10% as tensions intensified and fears grew over possible disruptions in oil supplies through the critical Strait of Hormuz
Analysts believe that a major market drop will happen only when the strait remains closed for an extended time. The market will maintain its weak condition until crude oil prices return to their former state.
Global Markets Also Under Pressure
The negative sentiment spread beyond Indian markets:
Asian markets declined around 1.1%
U. S. and European equity futures slipped
Gold rose nearly 2% as investors moved toward safe-haven assets
The spike in oil prices together with geopolitical uncertainty has created new worries about inflation and worldwide economic expansion.
What Investors Should Do
Market strategists advise against panic selling, noting that historical data shows geopolitical shocks often have limited long-term impact on equities. Past events such as the COVID-19 crisis, the Russia-Ukraine war and earlier Middle East conflicts saw markets recover within months.
Experts suggest investors use market weakness to gradually accumulate quality stocks in domestic-focused sectors such as:
- Banking
- Automobiles
- Capital goods
- Defence
Institutional Flows Show Mixed Trend
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) remained net sellers, offloading equities worth ₹7,536 crore on Friday. However, domestic institutional investors (DIIs) provided support, purchasing shares worth ₹12,293 crore on a net basis.
Outlook: Volatility Likely in the Near Term
With geopolitical risks still evolving and crude prices remaining volatile, markets are expected to stay cautious in the short term. Much will depend on energy supply stability and whether tensions in the Middle East escalate further.