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Indian stocks close the week with a decline as IT and commodity shares fall on recession fears

Indian shares closed the week on Friday lower, after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed sweeping retaliatory duties that intensified global trade wars and stoked fears of recession.

Due to their exposure to U.S. economic growth and commodities, information technology and commodity stocks have led the declines.

The Nifty 50 dropped 2.61% this week to 22,904.45 and the BSE Sensex fell 2.65% to $75,364.69. The indexes fell by 1.5% and 1.2% respectively on the day.

Indian markets, while Trump's tariffs are higher than expected, were not as affected on Thursday. They were buoyed by the optimism surrounding a lower levy on India, at 26% compared to major emerging economies, giving it a competitive advantage.

Aishvarya dadheech, chief executive officer of Fident Asset Management said: "That's more (of) a narrative than reality."

Emkay Global Financial Services said that India's relative less impact than other Asian nations is "a thin silver lining on a dark cloud".

Dadheech stated that India could not be immune from the negative sentiment or be an exception in a global market sell-off.

The IT index fell 9.2% in its largest weekly decline in five years on fears that a possible recession in the U.S. could derail the technology spending recovery.

Concerns about global growth caused metals and energy prices to fall 7.5% and 3.8% respectively.

The drugmakers have had a turbulent week. Stocks rose on Thursday after the sector was exempted of tariffs. However, the optimism was short lived as Trump threatened to levy "levels not seen before" in tariffs.

The pharma-index dropped 4% on the Friday after losing 2.7% over the past week.

The mid-cap and smaller-cap indexes fell 2% and 2.6% respectively for the week.

HDFC Bank and Bajaj Finance both rose 1.3% and 1.50%, respectively, against the trend. They were among the top three gainers on Nifty.

(source: Reuters)