Friday the 13th: Oil shock spooks markets, Sensex slips 348 points
Mumbai: Stocks were hit a by a sell-off with Sensex and Nifty recording their biggest single-session drop in over four months as civil unrest in major crude producer Iraq pushed up oil prices. The 30-share S&P BSE benchmark Sensex tanked 348.04 points, or 1.36 per cent, to end at 25,228.17 and NSE 50-share Nifty dropped 107.80 points, or 1.41 per cent, to 7,542.10. Surging crude oil prices in the global markets on concerns that unrest in Iraq could lead to disruptions in the country's oil supplies and a depreciating rupee were behind the fall in the share values, equity dealers said.
Rupee was last trading at 59.78, down over 50 paise against the US dollar. Slowing capital inflows also affected the market to some extent as Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) sold shares worth Rs 652.35 crore on June 12, as per provisional data. The Sensex resumed higher at 25,677.05 and shot up further to 25,688.31 on initial buying on the back of favourable retail inflation and IIP data that was released after markets closed on June 12.
However, it failed to maintain initial gains on fresh selling pressure mainly in realty, power, consumer durable, metal, banking and capital goods sectors to touch a low of 25,171.61. It ended the day at 25,228.17, showing a loss of 348.04 points or 1.36 per cent - the biggest daily drop since January 27, 2014 when it had tanked 426.11 points. Brent crude oil hit a 9-month high near USD 115 a barrel today after militants closed in on Iraq's capital Baghdad. A surging oil bill could pose problems for the economy Prime Minister Narendra Modi is trying to reboot, said brokers.
Besides, domestic stocks have reached dizzying heights and any negative news is being seen as a reason to book profits by some wary investors, they added. Interestingly, the "Friday the 13th" fear spooked Indian markets for the fifth time in a row. Sensex had fell between 19-238 points in the previous four occasions. Asian stocks ended mixed in a choppy trade after data showed China's industrial output and retail sales growth accelerated in May.