BSE trading floor during Sensex and Nifty rally on US-Iran ceasefire relief, with cheering traders amid rising indices and cautious expressions over fragile peace.
BSE trading floor during Sensex and Nifty rally on US-Iran ceasefire relief, with cheering traders amid rising indices and cautious expressions over fragile peace.
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Indian markets rally on US-Iran ceasefire relief but caution persists

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Indian equity benchmarks Sensex and Nifty posted their strongest single-day gains in years on Wednesday, driven by a US-Iran ceasefire that eased oil prices and inflation fears. The market capitalization of BSE-listed companies rose by ₹16.1 lakh crore. However, Asian stocks turned cautious as the ceasefire showed signs of fragility.

Indian markets surged amid global relief from the US-Iran ceasefire. The Sensex and Nifty recorded their biggest one-day advances in years, as falling oil prices reduced inflation concerns. BSE-listed firms saw their combined market value climb by ₹16.1 lakh crore, according to The Economic Times reports on the rally fueled by the truce in West Asia. Foreign institutional investors remained cautious despite the upswing. Bargain hunters targeted beaten-down stocks in aviation, travel, and oil marketing sectors, which rebounded sharply after the West Asia sell-off. Quality large-cap names in banking, pharmaceuticals, and FMCG also drew stronger interest, as they were less exposed to the conflict. Asian markets, however, grew subdued, with investors wary of the fragile Gulf ceasefire breaking down. Oil prices rose again, highlighting threats to the Strait of Hormuz and signaling persistent inflationary pressures that could sway central bank rate decisions. Overall sentiment stayed cautiously optimistic. Investors monitored fourth-quarter earnings, crude oil movements, and foreign institutional investor flows. Analysts questioned the rally's sustainability, while domestic issues like high valuations, growth slowdowns, weaker rupee, and elevated energy costs pressured corporate profits.

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Discussions on X highlight the sharp rally in Indian markets with Sensex and Nifty gaining nearly 4% and adding ₹16 lakh crore in market cap on US-Iran ceasefire easing oil prices. Positive sentiments focused on relief in financials, autos, and realty sectors. Skeptical views emerged today citing ceasefire fragility, renewed tensions in Strait of Hormuz, and profit booking leading to early pullback.

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Illustration of Middle East tensions causing stock market drops, oil price spikes, and investor flight to US dollar.
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Middle East conflict fuels global market volatility and oil price surge

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Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, involving the US, Israel, and Iran, have triggered a slide in Asian shares and a surge in oil prices. Investors are turning to the US dollar for safety amid fears of prolonged energy cost increases and inflation. While emerging markets face short-term losses, experts see long-term resilience.

Indian stock markets staged a significant rebound on Wednesday, fueled by hopes for peace in West Asia and falling oil prices. The NSE Nifty and BSE Sensex climbed substantially during the day, though some gains moderated by the close. Sectoral indices ended higher across the board amid cautious investor sentiment.

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Indian stock indices surged more than 1% on Monday, recovering from early losses. The rebound was fueled by a proposed ceasefire in West Asia and stable crude oil prices. The Nifty closed at 22,968.25, while the Sensex ended at 74,106.85.

Following initial market shocks from West Asia conflict, Indian equities saw major foreign investor outflows and remain volatile amid rising oil prices. FPIs withdrew $751.4 million on March 2—the largest daily pullout in four months—with markets resuming post-Holi holiday on March 4 under continued pressure.

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Stockholm's stock exchange rose 3.9 percent on Wednesday following an overnight ceasefire agreement between Iran and the US. The rally was broad among heavyweights, with Volvo AB up 7.7 percent. Concerns about the deal's fragility did little to dampen investor sentiment.

India's benchmark indices Sensex and Nifty are poised for a weak start on March 13 amid ongoing Middle East conflict, with Brent crude hitting $100 per barrel. This follows earlier market turmoil from the West Asia crisis, including Iran's Strait of Hormuz closure.

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Foreign portfolio investors pulled out a record Rs 1.18 lakh crore in March, driving the Sensex down 2.22% to 71,947.55 and Nifty 2.14% to 22,331.40 on Monday. The rupee breached 95 intra-day before closing at 94.83 against the dollar. Elevated crude prices above $100 per barrel due to the West Asia conflict added pressure.

 

 

 

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