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Thursday May 22, 2025

Indian markets plunge by $83bn amid escalating border tensions

By Reuters
May 10, 2025
An image of the Indian stock market. — AFP/File
An image of the Indian stock market. — AFP/File

Indian shares fll for a second straight session on Friday, losing about $83 billion in market value, as intensified military action between India and Pakistan rattled investors.

The nuclear-armed neighbours have been locked in conflict since Wednesday, when India targeted multiple locations in Pakistan in response to an attack in held Kashmir last month. The Nifty 50 fell 1.1 per cent on Friday but closed above the psychologically key 24,000-point mark, while the BSE Sensex also lost 1.1 per cent but ended below the 80,000 level it held the previous day. At its lowest, the market was set to lose $108 billion.

The indexes fell about 0.5 per cent on Thursday and have lost about 1.3 per cent this week, snapping a three-week winning run, their longest this year. “With so much escalation, domestic markets are jittery because further retaliatory measures from Pakistan could lead to a prolonged, full-fledged conflict,” said Avinash Gorakshaka, head of research at Profitmart Securities.

“Fundamentals will take a back seat while sentiment influenced by updates from the conflict could derail market momentum at least for a week if the fighting continues.”The volatility index nicknamed the ‘fear gauge’, rose for an eighth straight session to hit a more-than-one-month high.

Other asset classes also suffered, with the central bank forced to step in to stem the rupee’s slide.The stock market hit was broad. Twelve of the 13 major sectors declined this week, while the small-caps and mid-caps lost 1.9 per cent and 0.8 per cent, respectively.

The one bright spot was auto stocks, lifted by Tata Motors’ 8.7 per cent jump on hopes that the UK-US trade deal would boost the fortunes of its British unit JLR. It was the top among the 11 Nifty 50 members that gained this week.Analysts said hopes of a US-India trade deal and the country’s economic resilience would keep traders interested in the market.