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Indian benchmark shares drop as investors remain on edge due to Mideast cues

Indian benchmark shares fell Wednesday - after a recovery in the previous session - as investors were uncertain about the impact of the Middle East War on inflation and growth. Oil prices were also fluctuating.

As of 10:40 a.m. IST, the Nifty?50 dropped 0.7% to 24,087 while the BSE Sensex fell 0.8% to 77.556.77. In early trading, the indexes were unchanged.

Devarsh Vakil is the head of Prime Research for HDFC Securities. He said: "There's still considerable geopolitical unrest and that's why markets are on edge."

Israel and the United States launched what some have described as the war’s most heavy strikes against Iran. This was despite the fact that U.S. president Donald?Trump had said Monday that the conflict might be "over soon."

Oil prices have also experienced a temporary drop after the Wall Street Journal reported that the International Energy Agency had proposed a record release of oil reserves to reduce crude prices. This would offer some relief to the battered global stockpiles.

The Nifty 50 and Sensex recovered on Tuesday, after logging the biggest drop in a year in the Monday session. They ended near their one-year lows.

Since the beginning of the Iran War, the benchmarks have each lost 5%.

Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and other heavyweights all saw their shares fall on Wednesday.

The midcaps were flat, while the smallcaps rose by 0.5%.

Vakil stated that the news of an emergency oil stockpile being released by the International Energy Agency will help keep crude prices at a lower level and encourage market participants.

Brent crude futures traded 1.4% lower, at $86.64 a barrel.

IndiGo, a budget airline, gained up to 3% in individual stock prices after its CEO Pieter Elbers?resigned.

Solar equipment maker Waaree Energies rose up to 2.4% after a deal was struck to buy shares in United Solar Holdings worth $30 million. (Reporting and editing by Sumana Nady and Janane Venkatraman in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)