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Indian shares slump with Asian markets as US-Iran standoff continues

The Indian stock market fell and the rupee hit a new record low on Monday morning as oil prices rose after a drone strike?on an?assault?on a nuclear?plant?in the United Arab Emirates?intensified the tensions in Middle East. The mood was further dampened by U.S. president Donald Trump's warning that "the time is running out" for Iran as the Middle East conflict appears to be stalling.

As of 10:05 a.m. IST, the Nifty 50 index fell 1.26%, to?23.347.2. The BSE Sensex dropped 1.20%, to 74.335.62.

15?of 16 major sectors fell. Small-caps and midcaps both lost 1.6% and 2.1%, respectively.

The rupee fell to a record low after higher oil prices pushed global bond yields sky high.

Brent crude oil rose to $112 per barrel, the highest price in two weeks. Other Asian markets declined 0.8%.

Drone attacks in the Middle East are driving up oil prices, according to G. Chokkalingam. He is the founder and head researcher at Equinomics.

"High crude oil prices and the widening trade deficit that results are placing significant pressure on the rupee. This, in turn is fueling the continued outflow of foreign capital and weighing down on domestic equity.

The foreign portfolio investor has sold Indian stocks valued at $23.52 billion so far this fiscal year, surpassing the previous record of?2025.

HDFC Bank and Reliance Industries, two heavyweights in the financial sector, lost 1,4% and 1% respectively. Tata Steel fell 5% after the steelmaker posted a smaller-than-expected fourth-quarter ?profit.

Power Grid's shares fell 4.1%, despite its electric power transmission company reporting a profit increase of nearly 10% for the March quarter. Motilal attributed the growth in profit to a deferred tax of 52.8 billion rupees and said revenue and operating profits missed its estimates. Gland Pharma, which bucked the trend and jumped by 13.4% following its 97% increase in net profit for the March quarter, was the only company to do so.

(source: Reuters)