(P1) Indian stocks plunged on Monday, with the benchmark BSE Sensex tumbling over 1,000 points, as a spike in crude oil prices and a government appeal for austerity spooked investors. The 30-share Sensex fell 1,082.40 points, or about 1.4 percent, to close at 76,243.56.
(P2) "The market is facing pressure from two headwinds today," said V K Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Investments Ltd. "One, the expected resolution of the West Asia crisis has again slipped away... Two, PM Modi’s appeal to the nation to curb the consumption of petrol/diesel, gold... is a crisis management response to the current account deficit problem caused by high crude prices."
(P3) The selloff was broad-based, with jewellery, travel, and banking stocks bearing the brunt of the decline. Titan Company dived 8 percent, while smaller jewelers like Sky Gold and Senco Gold tumbled over 10 percent. InterGlobe Aviation, operator of IndiGo, slipped over 3.5 percent. The NSE Nifty 50 index dropped 309.45 points to 23,865.10.
(P4) The sharp decline highlights investor concerns over India's vulnerability to high oil prices, which could worsen the nation's current account deficit and fuel inflation. With Brent crude trading at $105.7 a barrel, the government's call for reduced consumption of imported goods suggests a period of economic belt-tightening may be ahead, potentially impacting corporate earnings and growth.
Market Rout Deepens
The sharp fall in Indian equities was triggered by a combination of escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and a domestic call for reduced consumption. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's appeal to citizens to postpone gold purchases and foreign travel for a year to conserve foreign exchange was interpreted by the market as a sign of the government's concern over the economic impact of rising import costs.
The plea had an immediate and severe impact on related sectors. Jewellery stocks were among the worst performers, with Sky Gold and Diamonds Ltd. plummeting 12.24 percent, Senco Gold Ltd. down 11 percent, and Kalyan Jewellers India Ltd. falling 9.99 percent. The broader market also felt the heat, with banking and aviation stocks facing heavy selling pressure.
Oil Spike Adds to Worries
Compounding the domestic concerns was a sharp rise in global crude oil prices. Brent crude, the international benchmark, jumped 4.32 percent to $105.70 a barrel after hopes for a diplomatic resolution to the conflict in West Asia faded. As India imports over 85 percent of its oil needs, a sustained rise in crude prices threatens to widen the trade deficit, weaken the rupee, and stoke inflation.
"PM Modi's appeal to the nation to curb the consumption of petrol/diesel, gold, chemical fertilisers and edible oil and refrain from avoidable foreign travel is a crisis management response to the current account deficit problem caused by high crude prices," said V K Vijayakumar of Geojit Investments Ltd. He added that this call for austerity has slightly negative implications for economic growth in the coming financial year.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.