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Indian shares sell off alongside global stock market as US tariffs cause recession fears

Indian shares sold off on Friday amid fears of a global economic recession due to the U.S. tariffs. They had largely avoided the storm during the previous session because the duties on India were lower than those on its competitors.

As of 10:51 a.m. IST the Nifty 50 was down 1.17% at 22,977.85, and the BSE Sensex fell 0.97% to 76,552. On Thursday, they fell by a very mild 0.4%.

The Asian share market fell by 0.8% today, following a 0.7% drop on Thursday. This was after Trump imposed a 10% tariff on all imports as well as higher rates for several trading partners.

India received a retaliatory tax of 27%, which is lower than China, Vietnam, and Bangladesh, who all had levy rates higher than 34%.

"While India is in a better position than its peers in terms of trade, global trade uncertainty has increased, and we believe that markets will be volatile in the short term," said Umesh Gaupta. He is the fund manager at Ambit Global Private Client and the head of PMS equity.

After a minimal impact the previous session, the mid-cap and smaller-cap indexes also fell 3% and 3.5% respectively.

The drug industry fell 6% following Trump's alleged threat to impose tariffs at "levels not seen before" on pharmaceutical products. After the sector was exempted of tariffs, it more than erased Thursday's gains of 2.3%.

Fears of a drop in client spending due to tariffs have led IT companies to fall 3%. This is on top of their previous 4.2% decline.

These fears have also led to a drop in crude oil prices, which has dragged the energy sector down by 3.3%. Reliance Industries, which is heavily weighted in energy, dropped by 3.5%. It was one of the largest drags on Nifty 50.

HDFC Bank, on the other hand, jumped by 2% following an encouraging report for the prior quarter. It kept the financial sector afloat. (Reporting and editing by Janane Venkatraman, Sonia Cheema and Vivek M.)

(source: Reuters)