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Indian shares drop the most in six weeks, $115 billion is wiped out and Mideast hopes fade

Indian stocks plunged on Tuesday. They lost about $115 billion in market value from firms listed on the National Stock Exchange. The outlook for Asia's third largest economy was worsened by fading hopes of a U.S. Iran deal.

After Prime Minister Narendra Modi called for a reduction in fuel use and fertilisers, and a restriction on travel abroad and imports as global energy prices surged, the 1.4 billion-person country was prepared to take tough measures.

The rupee fell to a new record low, Asia's worst performing currency so far in 2026, as crude remained near $107 a barrel, and outflows continued without abatement,?hammering stock prices across sectors.

"The pressure on equity is now being amplified a macro-triple hit of?higher oil prices, rupee sliding to a record low, and continued aggressive outflows of foreign funds," said Hariprasad K., founder of Livelong Wealth.

Hariprasad stated that there is a "broader sense of confidence shock" as investors interpret recent policy messaging as well as austerity-oriented comments as an indication of an upcoming tougher macroeconomic climate.

India is the third largest oil importer in the world. It imports more than 90% of its crude oil and about half of its gas needs.

The government has not yet raised the prices of fuels that are used by the general public. However, the oil minister stated on Tuesday that the government will at some point need to determine how long it can continue to sell fuels below the market price.

India's Nifty fell by 1.83%, to 23,379.55, and the BSE Sensex dropped by 1.92%, to 74,559.24. This was their worst day for six weeks. Their losses in two sessions now totaled about 3.4%.

The benchmark indexes, the Asian counterparts to the U.S.'s Dow Jones Industrial Average, fell by 1.3% when Donald Trump stated that a ceasefire between Iran and the United States was "on life support".

Tehran rejected the U.S. proposal for an end to the conflict, and remained steadfast on a list that the U.S. president called "garbage".

It takes a beating

The shares of Indian IT companies fell by?3.7%, to a low of three years. This was due to concerns that AI would disrupt their traditional business model and also ahead of U.S. data on inflation which could raise concerns about rate hikes.

The 16 major sectors declined, with small-caps dropping 3.2%, and mid-caps falling 2.5%.

ONGC and Oil India, on the other hand, rose 4.8% and 7.7% respectively after CLSA claimed that the royalty reductions on crude and natural gas production benefits them.

(source: Reuters)