Sensex drops 700 pts; Nifty near 23,300 — IT stocks fall
Digital Desk
Sensex fell ~700 points to 73,900 and Nifty slipped to 23,300 after heavy FII selling; IT stocks led declines amid mixed Asian cues and volatile flows.
Domestic indices fall after heavy FII selling; Sensex down 0.96% and Nifty near 23,300 amid mixed Asian cues
Indian equity markets opened sharply lower on Wednesday, with the BSE Sensex plunging about 700 points to trade around 73,900 and the Nifty50 slipping roughly 200 points to near 23,300, as foreign institutional investors offloaded large chunks of stock and information-technology names faced the steepest selling pressure.
Early trade movement
The Sensex was down 0.96% in early trade, while the Nifty fell about 0.80%. Losses were broad-based but most pronounced in the IT pack, which saw consistent declines from the opening bell. Market participants said sentiment turned cautious after heavy net outflows by FIIs in the previous session.
FII selling and flows
Data compiled by exchanges shows foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold equities worth about ₹8,363 crore on Tuesday. Over the past seven days, FIIs are net sellers to the tune of around ₹33,381 crore, and their 30‑day net outflow stands near ₹71,074 crore. Domestic institutional investors (DIIs), led by mutual funds, remained net buyers; DIIs bought approximately ₹9,589 crore on Tuesday and have added about ₹31,463 crore over the last week.
Regional markets and global cues
Asian markets presented a mixed picture on Wednesday. South Korea’s Kospi was marginally higher, while Japan’s Nikkei jumped over 2.5% in early trading. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng, however, fell more than 1.5%. In the US, major indexes had closed with modest gains on Tuesday—Dow Jones rose around 229 points, the S&P 500 added roughly 10 points and the Nasdaq was largely flat—lending a muted backdrop to Asian sessions.
Analysts’ read
“Foreign selling remains the dominant near-term theme,” said a market strategist at a Mumbai-based brokerage, requesting anonymity. “That, combined with profit-taking in large-cap ITs after recent run-ups, is weighing on indices. Internals are weak and breadth is negative in morning trade.” Analysts added that any fresh triggers—earnings updates, macro data or commentary from global central banks—could amplify the moves.
Sector impact
IT stocks led declines, with several mid- and large-cap software names recording sharp losses. Financials, consumer discretionary and select industrial stocks also traded lower. Defensive sectors such as utilities and certain FMCG names showed relative resilience. Brokers pointed to renewed concerns around margin compression and discretionary spending in key global markets as reasons investors pared back exposure to technology names.
Short-term context
Markets had rallied on Tuesday, when benchmark indices closed higher by about 383 points after a day of buying. That rebound, however, was followed by renewed selling from overseas investors, reversing gains. Traders said positioning ahead of domestic macro releases and global cues could keep volatility elevated through the week.
Ground-level cues
On the trading floor at the Bombay Stock Exchange this morning, dealers described brisk offloading in large-cap IT scripts and rotation into cash-heavy defensive names. “The mood is cautious; traders are trimming positions and waiting for clearer directional cues,” said a dealer on the floor.
What to watch next
Investors will look to domestic data due later in the week and any commentary from global central banks for fresh direction. Quarterly earnings from large corporates in coming sessions could also influence sentiment, particularly in the beaten-up IT sector. Market participants will keep a close eye on FII flow data, as sustained outflows could prolong the weakness.
Bottom line
The market’s early weakness on Wednesday was driven largely by heavy FII selling and profit-taking in IT stocks, leaving benchmarks down nearly 1% for the Sensex and about 0.8% for the Nifty. With regional cues mixed and global markets having closed modestly higher overnight, traders said volatility is likely to remain a feature in the short term.
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Sensex drops 700 pts; Nifty near 23,300 — IT stocks fall
Digital Desk
Domestic indices fall after heavy FII selling; Sensex down 0.96% and Nifty near 23,300 amid mixed Asian cues
Indian equity markets opened sharply lower on Wednesday, with the BSE Sensex plunging about 700 points to trade around 73,900 and the Nifty50 slipping roughly 200 points to near 23,300, as foreign institutional investors offloaded large chunks of stock and information-technology names faced the steepest selling pressure.
Early trade movement
The Sensex was down 0.96% in early trade, while the Nifty fell about 0.80%. Losses were broad-based but most pronounced in the IT pack, which saw consistent declines from the opening bell. Market participants said sentiment turned cautious after heavy net outflows by FIIs in the previous session.
FII selling and flows
Data compiled by exchanges shows foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold equities worth about ₹8,363 crore on Tuesday. Over the past seven days, FIIs are net sellers to the tune of around ₹33,381 crore, and their 30‑day net outflow stands near ₹71,074 crore. Domestic institutional investors (DIIs), led by mutual funds, remained net buyers; DIIs bought approximately ₹9,589 crore on Tuesday and have added about ₹31,463 crore over the last week.
Regional markets and global cues
Asian markets presented a mixed picture on Wednesday. South Korea’s Kospi was marginally higher, while Japan’s Nikkei jumped over 2.5% in early trading. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng, however, fell more than 1.5%. In the US, major indexes had closed with modest gains on Tuesday—Dow Jones rose around 229 points, the S&P 500 added roughly 10 points and the Nasdaq was largely flat—lending a muted backdrop to Asian sessions.
Analysts’ read
“Foreign selling remains the dominant near-term theme,” said a market strategist at a Mumbai-based brokerage, requesting anonymity. “That, combined with profit-taking in large-cap ITs after recent run-ups, is weighing on indices. Internals are weak and breadth is negative in morning trade.” Analysts added that any fresh triggers—earnings updates, macro data or commentary from global central banks—could amplify the moves.
Sector impact
IT stocks led declines, with several mid- and large-cap software names recording sharp losses. Financials, consumer discretionary and select industrial stocks also traded lower. Defensive sectors such as utilities and certain FMCG names showed relative resilience. Brokers pointed to renewed concerns around margin compression and discretionary spending in key global markets as reasons investors pared back exposure to technology names.
Short-term context
Markets had rallied on Tuesday, when benchmark indices closed higher by about 383 points after a day of buying. That rebound, however, was followed by renewed selling from overseas investors, reversing gains. Traders said positioning ahead of domestic macro releases and global cues could keep volatility elevated through the week.
Ground-level cues
On the trading floor at the Bombay Stock Exchange this morning, dealers described brisk offloading in large-cap IT scripts and rotation into cash-heavy defensive names. “The mood is cautious; traders are trimming positions and waiting for clearer directional cues,” said a dealer on the floor.
What to watch next
Investors will look to domestic data due later in the week and any commentary from global central banks for fresh direction. Quarterly earnings from large corporates in coming sessions could also influence sentiment, particularly in the beaten-up IT sector. Market participants will keep a close eye on FII flow data, as sustained outflows could prolong the weakness.
Bottom line
The market’s early weakness on Wednesday was driven largely by heavy FII selling and profit-taking in IT stocks, leaving benchmarks down nearly 1% for the Sensex and about 0.8% for the Nifty. With regional cues mixed and global markets having closed modestly higher overnight, traders said volatility is likely to remain a feature in the short term.