Mumbai: Dalal Street witnessed a sharp selloff on Tuesday as the BSE Sensex plunged 1,069 points, erasing nearly ₹3 lakh crore in investor wealth in a single session. The NSE Nifty also slipped sharply, reflecting broad-based weakness across sectors.
The fall was triggered by a combination of global and domestic factors that rattled investor confidence and intensified selling pressure throughout the day.
The biggest drag on the indices came from heavyweights in the IT sector. Technology stocks saw aggressive profit booking following weak global cues and renewed concerns over US trade policies. Since IT carries significant weight in the Sensex and Nifty, the decline amplified the overall market fall.
Fresh tariff developments in the United States further dented sentiment. Reports of higher trade levies and uncertainty around global trade agreements triggered risk aversion across emerging markets, including India. Investors feared that escalating trade tensions could impact global growth and export-driven sectors.
Global markets also remained under pressure, with US indices closing lower overnight. Asian markets mirrored the weakness, setting a negative tone for domestic trading from the opening bell.
Adding to the volatility was the ongoing derivatives (F&O) expiry week, which typically sees aggressive unwinding of positions. Stop-loss triggers and margin-related selling accelerated the decline in the latter half of the session.
Currency movement also weighed on sentiment, as the rupee showed signs of weakness against the US dollar. A softer rupee raises concerns over inflation and imported costs, particularly amid firm crude oil prices.
Meanwhile, rising geopolitical tensions and elevated India VIX levels signalled heightened uncertainty, prompting traders to cut exposure in risk assets.
Despite the sharp fall, market experts suggest that the correction appears sentiment-driven rather than structural at this stage. Investors are advised to avoid panic selling, maintain discipline, and focus on fundamentally strong stocks while keeping an eye on global developments.
Dalal Street may remain volatile in the near term, but long-term investors are encouraged to view corrections as opportunities, provided risk is managed carefully.









