Stock market crash: The Indian stock market suffered significant losses in trade on Monday, February 3, with the Sensex falling over 700 points and the Nifty 50 plunging to a level below 23,250 in today's intraday trade, February 03, amid weak global cues and concerns over weak capex allocation in the Union Budget 2025, which led to a sharp sell-off in capex-related stocks.
However, markets saw some buying interest towards the end of the session, helping them close above crucial levels. The Nifty 50 ended the session with a drop of 0.52%, closing at 23,361, while the Sensex closed at 77,186, marking a 0.46% drop compared to Saturday's close.
The broader markets witnessed even more pain, with the Nifty Smallcap 100 index falling 2.13% to 16,617, while the Nifty Midcap 100 index concluded the day with a drop of 0.93%, closing at 52,988.
Among sectoral indices, BSE Capital Goods emerged as the worst performer, losing 4.29% of its value, followed by BSE Power, Nifty PSE, Nifty Energy, and BSE Oil & Gas, which fell between 2.5% and 3.3%.
On the winning side, Consumer Durables stocks continued their winning trajectory post-budget, as expectations grew that a cut in income tax would boost discretionary spending, with the BSE Consumer Durables soaring another 0.74% in trade. Similarly, IT stocks managed to end the session in the green, with the Nifty IT index gaining 0.68%.
Here are some of the factors that impacted the markets in today’s session.
Experts pointed out the following five reasons behind the fall in the Indian stock market:
The Indian stock market reacted to weak global cues. Major Asian markets fell on Monday after US President Donald Trump announced tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, raising concerns about a broad trade war that could impact global economic growth. Japan's Nikkei and Korea's KOSPI fell 3 per cent each.
"Despite an excellent budget, the market will be under pressure from the Trump tariffs and the heightened global uncertainty that these ‘initial rounds of tariffs’ have triggered," said V K Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Financial Services.
As widely reported by the media, US President Donald Trump slapped Canada and Mexico with 25 per cent duties. A 10 per cent levy has also been imposed on imports from America’s biggest trade partner, China. Retaliatory tariffs are underway.
Experts believe Trump's tariff policy could unleash a tariff war which could derail the global economy.
"It is important to understand that the 25 per cent tariffs imposed on Mexico and Canada are to punish them for issues like immigration and illicit trade in fentanyl. Trump may use tariffs against other countries again on non-trade issues. China’s response to the 10 per cent tariffs has been more responsible. For now, they have not reacted like Mexico and Canada by imposing tariffs on imports from the US. Instead, they are moving the WTO against the US action," said Vijayakumar.
The Indian rupee opened at a record low on Monday, breaching 87 per US dollar for the first time. The dollar witnessed strong gains against many of its peers after Trump imposed sweeping tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China.
“The spike in the dollar index to above 109.6 will trigger more selling by FIIs (foreign institutional investors), putting the market under pressure,” said Vijayakumar.
With the Union Budget over, all eyes are on the outcome of the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced major changes on the income tax front aimed at boosting consumption. Experts expect the RBI to offer further relief to consumers by cutting rates by 25 bps.
Relentless selling by foreign institutional investors (FIIs) has been a major driver of the market downturn since October.
FIIs have been consistently offloading Indian equities since October 2024, weighing heavily on investor sentiment. As a result, the Nifty 50 has recorded monthly declines since then.
Between October 1, 2024, and February 1, 2025, FIIs have dumped Indian stocks worth nearly ₹2.7 lakh crore, exacerbating the market’s downward trajectory.
Stretched valuation of the Indian stock market, weak quarterly earnings and rising US dollar and bond yields have been driving foreign investors away from the Indian market since October.
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