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Indian shares continue to fall and the rupee is at a record low, as optimism about a Mideast deal fades

The rupee and Indian shares both fell to a new record low Tuesday as crude oil prices rose. This was due to fragile negotiations over the end of the Iran 'war, which fueled concerns about global supply and economic fallout.

As of 10:15 a.m. IST the Nifty 50?was down 0.69% to 23,652.4 while the BSE Sensex fell 0.82%, to 75,386.61. The benchmarks fell by 1.5% each on Monday.

The mood was also affected after Prime Minister Narendra modi, over the weekend, urged fuel conservancy and restraint in gold purchases to help preserve foreign currency reserves. Jewellers, oil companies and travel stocks were all down for a second session.

The rupee fell to a new record low as concerns about India's import bill grew. Crude oil prices hovered around $105 per barrel, and the outflow of foreign currency continued.

The Asian markets dropped 0.7% on Monday after U.S. president Donald Trump claimed that the ceasefire agreement with Iran is "on life support". He also called Tehran's response, to a U.S. proposed peace plan, "stupid", causing a fear of a long-term conflict.

India is the third largest oil importer in the world. Higher crude prices can cause inflation, devalue the currency, and impact growth and corporate profits.

Investors were waiting for India's retail inflation data due later that day to get a sense of how much higher fuel costs have affected domestic prices.

In a poll, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) estimated that annual inflation would likely be closer to its 4% target by April from March's 3.4%.

11 of 16 major sectors suffered losses. The broader small-caps fell by 1.1%, while the?midcaps declined by 0.7%.

Bajaj Broking Research stated that "the lack of progress in the U.S.Iran peace negotiations, along with continued selling pressure from foreigners, has weighed heavily on the market sentiment. There is a broad-based sell-off across all sectors."

Financials fell 1% while the IT sub-index dropped 3.3% in advance of U.S. Inflation data. TCS,?Infosys and HCLTech all saw declines between 2.5%?and 4%.

ONGC, Oil?India and other companies rose 6% and 6.6% respectively after CLSA, a brokerage, referred to the government's cuts in royalty rates on crude oil and natural gas production as a positive development for both companies.

(source: Reuters)