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Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Bloodbath on Dalal Street wipes out over Rs 9 lakh crore of investor wealth

Benchmark stock market indices suffered a heavy blow on Monday as investors reacted to rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, sparked by recent military strikes and counterstrikes involving Iran, Israel and the United States.

The broad sell-off sent the BSE Sensex plunging sharply, briefly dragging it below the 80,000 mark. By around 1:48 pm, the Sensex was trading near 79,615, down more than 1,670 points, or 2.06%, as risk-off sentiment gripped markets. The broader NSE Nifty50 also weakened, reflecting broad-based selling across sectors.

The bloodbath on Dalal Street translated into a massive erosion of investor wealth. Total market capitalisation on the BSE slid by more than Rs 9 lakh crore, dropping from nearly Rs 463 lakh crore on Friday to about Rs 454 lakh crore during intraday trade.

Traders said the speed and scale of the decline pointed to fear dominating logic.

Over the weekend, news reports indicated intensified clashes in the Gulf region after the death of Iran’s supreme leader during a US-Israeli operation, followed by retaliatory strikes from Tehran.

That escalation raised fresh concerns that conflict could spread or disrupt vital global energy routes, including the Strait of Hormuz, through which nearly one-fifth of the world’s oil supplies pass.

Fears of supply bottlenecks helped push Brent crude prices to multi-month highs and feed anxiety about inflation and economic pressure on oil-importing nations such as India. Early data showed Brent rising sharply, lifting costs for consumers and businesses alike and weighing on sentiment.

In markets, any sudden spike in oil quickly gets priced into equities because higher fuel costs feed into inflation, weaken the local currency and raise input costs for firms.

India, which imports a large portion of its crude requirements, is particularly sensitive to such episodes. The recent jump in oil prices also reinforced worries about widening trade deficits, higher bond yields and delayed monetary policy easing.

Analysts who spoke to IndiaToday.in described Monday’s plunge as primarily a knee-jerk reaction to geopolitical risk and the sudden surge in crude. They pointed out that financial markets often overshoot on the downside when fear outweighs fundamentals, and that risk assets like stocks are the first to feel the impact during periods of heightened uncertainty.

From a long-term perspective, most Indian companies and the broader economy were on solid footing before the latest rally in crude prices and conflict headlines.

Corporate earnings growth, domestic demand trends and economic data had been supportive, which suggests that the sharp drop in markets reflects sentiment rather than a fundamental breakdown in economic health.

Even so, the loss of market wealth is not just a number on a screen. Retail and institutional investors alike saw the value of portfolios shrink within hours, and sectors sensitive to crude and credit conditions, such as aviation, automobiles and chemicals, experienced especially steep selling.

Foreign institutional investors were also net sellers, as they trimmed exposure amid global risk aversion.

Experts stressed that investors should avoid emotional reactions and focus on fundamentals and time horizon. Historically, geopolitical selloffs can be sharp and sudden but also short-lived when tensions ease or clarity emerges.

If crude prices stabilise and the geopolitical situation calms, markets may recoup part of the losses as confidence returns to risk assets. Until then, volatility is likely to remain elevated as traders grapple with headline risk and macro uncertainty.

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