Nifty claws back 500 points from day's low after a volatile session

Nifty claws back 500 points from day's low after a volatile session


The numbers, however, masked the turbulence beneath.

Markets staged a dramatic intraday turnaround on Thursday, April 2, 2026, with the Nifty 50 recovering over 500 points from its session low to close marginally higher, as geopolitics, crude oil, and a surprise rupee rally collided in one of the most volatile sessions of the year.

The BSE Sensex closed at 73,319.55, up 185.23 points or 0.25 per cent, while the Nifty 50 settled at 22,713.10, gaining 33.70 points or 0.15 per cent. The numbers, however, masked the turbulence beneath. The Nifty had earlier slipped over 2 per cent after US President Donald Trump said the US would hit Iran hard in the next two to three weeks, dashing hopes of an early ceasefire. Brent crude spiked 5.8 per cent to around $107 per barrel on fears of supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz.

Analysts still remains sceptical on market recovery, as Iran war continue to trigger risk-off sentiment.

“Market sentiment is expected to remain volatile, with direction contingent on developments in the US–Iran conflict over the weekend and movements in global energy prices, said Siddhartha Khemka, Head of Research at Motilal Oswal Financial Services, Markets return after the Good Friday holiday on April 3, making any weekend geopolitical development — escalation or ceasefire — the decisive variable heading into next week, he cautioned.

Meanwhile, Nomura has also downgraded India to “Neutral” and cut its Nifty50 year-end target to 24,500.

Multiple headwinds ranging from elevated energy prices to the AI capex momentum and the tech cycle are likely to impact, said the global investment advisory firm. Earlier, Goldman Sachs, Bernstein and UBS were also downgraded Indian equities.

For the week, Nifty and Sensex, declined 0.5 per cent and 0.4 per cent respectively. BSE Midcap 150 underperformed the benchmarks (down 0.6 per cent WoW) while the BSE Smallcap 250 outperformed the benchmarks (rose 0.8 per cent WoW), said SBI Securities in a note.

IT rallies

IT was the lone sectoral gainer, rising 2.6 per cent, while auto, PSU banks, oil & gas, pharma, and consumer durables each shed approximately 1 per cent. Broader markets lagged, with Midcap and Smallcap indices declining 0.3 per cent and 0.4 per cent, respectively. Bank Nifty ended at 51,548.75, up a modest 0.19 per cent.

Rupee rebounds

The rupee delivered a stunning reversal, posting its strongest single-session gain in over 12 years, recovering sharply from recent lows beyond ₹95 to trade around ₹93.15. The RBI’s twin regulatory actions — capping banks’ net open rupee positions and barring NDF offerings to corporates — forced dollar unwinding. As Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Investments, noted: “The RBI’s twin regulatory actions…achieved their intended effect, mechanically forcing dollar unwinding and engineering a meaningful rupee recovery. A short-covering-driven intraday recovery followed, though it lacked the depth of genuine conviction.”

Gold drops

Gold retreated sharply, falling ₹5,000 to ₹1,49,000 per 10 grams, pressured by the rupee’s surge and selling on COMEX toward $4,625 per ounce. On the institutional front, FIIs offloaded ₹1.22 lakh crore in March 2026 alone — surpassing the previous peak of ₹1.14 lakh crore in October 2024. India VIX rose 2.04 per cent to close at 25.52, keeping risk-reward dynamics particularly challenging in the derivatives segment.

Triggers ahead

The week ahead is packed with triggers. The RBI MPC meeting takes centre stage — a rate pause is widely expected, but commentary on the rate trajectory matters against a backdrop of a four-year low Manufacturing PMI and crude-driven inflation risks. The US March CPI print and weekly jobless claims will also be in focus, said Khemka.

Published on April 2, 2026



Source link

OPEC+ likely to weigh further oil output hike on Sunday, sources say

OPEC+ likely to weigh further oil output hike on Sunday, sources say


Top OPEC producers Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait and the United Arab ‌Emirates have cut output due to the effective closure of Hormuz.
| Photo Credit:
Leonhard Foeger

OPEC+ is likely to weigh a further oil output increase when eight members meet on Sunday, two OPEC+ sources said, a ​move that would position key producers to add more barrels should the Strait of Hormuz – the world’s most ‌important oil route, currently shut by the US-Israeli war with Iran – reopen.

At ​its last meeting on March 1, OPEC+ agreed to a modest output boost ⁠of 206,000 barrels per day for April, after holding output steady in the first quarter amid concerns of oversupply, just as the US-Israeli war with Iran began to disrupt oil flows from key West Asia members.

A month later, the war has led to the largest oil supply disruption on record.

Top OPEC producers Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait and the United Arab ‌Emirates have cut output due to the effective closure of Hormuz, which accounts for ‌over ⁠20 per cent of oil transit. Crude prices have soared to a four-year high of ⁠almost $120 a barrel. On top of that, Russian output is disrupted by drone attacks.

Sunday’s meeting would normally be expected to decide May output quotas. While there is no sign yet of a reopening of Hormuz, one source ​said OPEC+ would likely agree to an ‌increase that would have little immediate impact on supply but would signal readiness to raise output once tankers are able to resume shipments through the strait.

“We need to react, at least on paper,” the OPEC+ source said.

OPEC and authorities in Saudi Arabia and Russia ‌did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Output flexibility limited

The rest of the ​eight OPEC+ countries – Russia, Kazakhstan, Algeria and Oman – are not affected by closure of the waterway, but have limited capacity to raise output. OPEC+ groups ⁠22 members including Iran, but in recent years only the eight countries have been involved in monthly production decisions.

Oil dropped towards $100 on Wednesday after President Donald Trump said that the US would ‌end its war on Iran fairly soon, only to rebound on Thursday as he said the US would keep up attacks on Iran.

“Now the market requires every barrel that can be produced,” another OPEC+ source said.

Both sources declined to be identified by name and said formal consultations between members had not yet begun. A third source said a pause in monthly production increments was also possible given current export constraints.

In addition to the eight-country meeting, a separate gathering ‌of ministers called the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee is also scheduled for Sunday.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab ​Emirates both have export routes that bypass the strait. Saudi crude exports through Yanbu on the Red Sea coast have surged to around 4.6 million ⁠bpd, near capacity, as the country reroutes shipments.

The UAE continues to export from Fujairah, which lies outside ⁠the strait. Fujairah crude and condensate exports in March rose to 1.61 million bpd, from 1.17 million bpd in February, according to Kpler, accounting for nearly half ‌of total UAE exports before the war began.

The eight OPEC+ countries raised production quotas by about 2.9 million bpd from April 2025 through December 2025, roughly 3 per cent of global demand, ​before pausing increases for January to March 2026.

Published on April 2, 2026



Source link

Franklin Templeton sees higher SIP inflows, deploys cash amid market dip

Franklin Templeton sees higher SIP inflows, deploys cash amid market dip


Franklin Templeton has also launched a new long-short fund to capitalise on volatility, signalling confidence in a potential market recovery.

Franklin Templeton has witnessed higher systematic investment plan (SIP) flows in March compared to February despite the dent to investor sentiment because of the West Asia conflict, a top company official said on Thursday.

Even as widespread concern exists about how long the conflict will last and the subsequent recovery, the company is taking advantage of the dip in share prices to buy scrips, rather than preferring to hold cash across its schemes, Franklin Templeton Asset Management India president Avinash Satwalekar told reporters here.

SIP flows for the industry are set to decline further in March from February’s Rs 29,845 crore because this has been the historical experience where any concern lead to a relook into SIPs, he said.

However, citing conversations with senior management earlier, Satwalekar said SIP flows have increased for schemes managed by FT but declined to specify the factors that are helping the company.

“If we find names that we like that are getting cheaper, we will put more capital to work,” he said.

Firm deploys capital amid market corrections

On the quantum of cash it is choosing to carry and how the proportion compares with the pre-conflict period before February 28, Satwalekar said proportion will be much smaller.

“It (cash) should be less because this is the kind of market we thrive in. We start deploying (the cash),” he said.

Satwalekar explained that over the last three decades, every crisis has resulted in a correction followed by a sharp recovery, which yields handsome results for investors who enter at low levels. He exuded confidence that the conflict started after the US and Israel’s attack on Iran will be no different unless it escalates into a World War-like scenario.

Large caps preferred over mid and small caps

Corrections in the indices have brought down large cap stocks’ valuations, making them more interesting for buyers, he said, adding that the fund house feels that earnings growth over the next three years will again push valuations higher in such stocks once the conflict is over.

Additionally, large companies are better placed to handle the conflict’s impact compared to others, making them a better investment option.

In contrast, the valuations in small and mid cap stocks have not corrected by as much, and stocks in the segment continue to be higher than the mean.

Launch of new long-short fund

FT on Thursday launched its maiden Specialised Investment Fund christened ‘Sapphie Equity Long-Short SIF’, which will allocate up to a fourth of its holdings to short positions.

Satwalekar said this is an opportune time to launch an offering like this because of the return possibilities in a volatile market like the current one. The new fund offer for the offering will be open between April 10 and 24.

Published on April 2, 2026



Source link

Iran War: बासमती से लेकर दवाओं तक, खतरे में भारत के ये 6 सेक्टर, एक्सपोर्टर्स की टूटी कमर

Iran War: बासमती से लेकर दवाओं तक, खतरे में भारत के ये 6 सेक्टर, एक्सपोर्टर्स की टूटी कमर


Iran War Impact on Indian Economy: ईरान-इज़रायल तनाव सिर्फ एक युद्ध की आशंका नहीं है, यह भारत की अर्थव्यवस्था के लिए एक बड़ा झटका बनता जा रहा है. कॉमर्स मिनिस्ट्री ने गुरुवार को बताया है कि वेस्ट एशिया को भारत का जो 56% निर्यात जाता है, वो अभी माल लंबे रास्ते से भेजा जा रहा है, जिससे लागत और समय दोनों बढ़ रहे हैं. मंत्रालय ने 6 अहम सेक्टर्स पर असर का आकलन पेश किया है.

वेस्ट एशिया भारतीय बासमती, समुद्री उत्पाद और ताज़े फलों का सबसे बड़ा बाज़ार है. अभी हवाई और समुद्री माल-भाड़ा तेज़ी से बढ़ रहा है. ताज़े फल-सब्ज़ियां रास्ते में ही खराब होने का खतरा है. बासमती के पेमेंट चैनल्स बाधित हो रहे हैं और क्रेडिट साइकिल टूट रहा है. इससे भी बड़ी चिंता यह है कि यूरिया बनाने के लिए एलएनजी फीडस्टॉक की सप्लाई खतरे में है. मानसून सीज़न से पहले नाइट्रोजन खाद का संकट खड़ा हो सकता है.

इंजीनियरिंग गुड्स, लोहे से लेकर मशीनरी तक सब जाम

यह भारत की सबसे बड़ी माल निर्यात श्रेणी है. वेस्ट एशिया में लोहे, स्टील और मशीनरी की भारी मांग है, लेकिन फाउंड्री और मशीनिंग यूनिट्स के लिए एलपीजी-पीएनजी सप्लाई दबाव में है. इससे एल्युमीनियम सप्लाई भी बाधित हो चुकी है.

खाड़ी के प्रमुख बंदरगाह भारतीय इंजीनियरिंग सामान की एंट्री टूटू हुई है. जहाज़ों को लंबे रास्ते से भेजना पड़ रहा है, जिससे ट्रांज़िट टाइम बढ़ रहा है और वॉर रिस्क सरचार्ज अलग से लग रहा है.

सोना आना भी मुश्किल, बेचना भी

GCC देश भारत के रत्न एवं आभूषण उद्योग के लिए एक साथ खरीदार और स्पलायर दोनों हैं. एक तरफ GCC को सोने के आभूषणों का निर्यात ठप पड़ रहा है. इससे diaspora के लिए बने कस्टूमाइजिड प्रोडेक्ट कहीं और नहीं बेचे जा सकते.

दूसरी तरफ GCC से गोल्ड बार और रफ डायमंड्स का निर्यात भी बाधित है और विविधता के विकल्प सीमित हैं. ऊपर से विनिर्माण क्लस्टर में LPG संकट से मेटल मेलटिंग और रत्न प्रसंस्करण प्रभावित हो रही है.

Strait of Hormuz पर सबसे बड़ा दांव

भारत दुनिया के सबसे बड़े कच्चे तेल, प्राकृतिक गैस और तरलीकृत पेट्रोलियम गैस (एलपीजी) आयातकों में से एक है. हॉर्मुज़ जलडमरूमध्य से एलपीजी पारगमन मार्ग अभी भारी दबाव में हैं. वाणिज्यिक और औद्योगिक एलपीजी आपूर्ति पर दबाव है. हालांकि मंत्रालय ने कहा, “घरेलू और सीएनजी के लिए प्राथमिकता आवंटन के जरिए आपूर्ति बनाए रखी जा रही है.

केमिकल्स और पेट्रोकेमिकल्स -MSME को कच्चा माल नहीं मिल रहा

दवा, कपड़ा, कृषि और पैकेजिंग इन सबकी नींव पेट्रोकेमिकल्स पर टिकी है. आइसोप्रोपिल अल्कोहल (IPA) और विलायकों जैसे महत्वपूर्ण दवा इनपुट्स की आपूर्ति बाधित हो रही है. पॉलीइथाइलीन (PE) और पॉलीप्रोपाइलीन (PP) जैसे बहुलकों के दाम तेज़ी से बढ़ रहे हैं जिससे लघु एवं मध्यम कंपनियां कच्चे माल के संकट में फंस रही हैं.

दवाई बनाने की पूरी कड़ी हिल रही है

भारत दुनिया का सबसे बड़ा जेनेरिक दवाओं का आपूर्तिकर्ता और सक्रिय दवा सामग्री (API) निर्यातक है और यही सबसे नाज़ुक स्थिति में है. संकट की पूरी कड़ी कुछ ऐसी है…

  • गैस की कटौती से IPA और विलायक की कमी.
  • इससे API उत्पादन बाधित होता है और दवाई बनाने में देरी होती है.
  • पैकेजिंग भी महंगी हो रही है.

उच्च घनत्व वाले पॉलीइथाइलीन (HDPE) और PP की लागत बढ़ रही है और कांच की भट्टियां बंद होने का खतरा है जिन्हें दोबारा शुरू करना बेहद मुश्किल होता है.

सरकार का जवाब

संकट के मद्देनज़र सरकार ने निर्यात ऋण गारंटी निगम (ECGC) बीमा कवरेज 100% करने और किस्त (प्रीमियम) न बढ़ाने का ऐलान किया है ताकि निर्यातकों का भुगतान चूक जोखिम सरकार अपने ऊपर ले ले. लेकिन आयात-निर्यात सभी पर बड़ा संकट नजर आ रहा है.



Source link

BMW surges, Audi slumps as India’s luxury EV market splits in FY26

BMW surges, Audi slumps as India’s luxury EV market splits in FY26


 BMW India more than doubled its EV sales to 3,537 units in FY26

India’s luxury passenger EV market is splitting sharply in FY26, with BMW scaling to record highs even as Audi’s volumes have collapsed, exposing a widening gap in how automakers are executing their electric strategies, industry observers said.

The sharp change in the numbers as seen on the Vahan portal shows BMW India more than doubled its EV sales to 3,537 units in FY26, up from 1,580 units a year earlier, lifting its market share to a commanding 65 per cent from 47 per cent.

In contrast, Audi’s volumes fell sharply to just 17 units from 131 in FY25, marking one of the steepest declines in the segment.

The contrast, in many ways, captures the rise of BMW and the fall of Audi in India’s luxury EV market, analysts said.

The gap with other competitors has also widened. Mercedes-Benz India, the segment’s traditional leader in overall luxury vehicles, saw its EV sales decline 10 per cent on-year to 1,047 units, with its market share dropping to 19 per cent from 34 per cent.

The decline reflects a combination of supply constraints and pricing pressures. Industry observers said a shift in buyer preference at the top end, where diesel-powered models continue to dominate, has also limited the addressable market for high-end EVs.

Entry-level iX1

In contrast, BMW has been able to drive EV volumes through competitively priced entry-level offerings such as the iX1, which accounts for a significant share of its sales. Analysts said BMW’s ability to position EVs closer to their internal combustion counterparts has reduced the friction for first-time luxury EV buyers.

Volvo, the third-largest player, reported a 5 per cent decline in EV volumes to 382 units, with its share slipping to 7 per cent from 12 per cent. While the XC40 Recharge continues to perform steadily, industry observers said the brand is facing increasing competition from newer and more aggressively positioned offerings.

Tesla, entering the market with 342 units, has emerged as a new disruptor. While still in a limited rollout phase, its tech-first positioning is drawing interest from buyers, particularly those considering premium EVs from traditional luxury marques, analysts said.

Winner-takes-most

Taken together, the data suggest the market is not expanding evenly but tilting towards a winner-takes-most dynamic, where early scale advantages are translating into disproportionate gains, analysts said.

BMW’s outperformance is not accidental. Analysts point to its “power of choice” strategy — offering petrol, diesel, and electric powertrains on shared platforms — as a key advantage, allowing it to scale EV volumes in line with demand without overcommitting to a single architecture.

This has been supported by local assembly and aggressive pricing, which have helped narrow the gap between internal combustion and electric models. Entry-level products such as the iX1 have lowered the barrier for entry, while a broad portfolio spanning entry-level SUVs to flagship limousines has enabled BMW to tap multiple customer segments, industry observers said.

Chauffeur-driven

At the top end, models such as the i7 are also seeing increasing traction, particularly among chauffeur-driven buyers, reflecting a gradual shift in usage patterns.

The divergence, therefore, is not just about demand, but about how effectively each automaker is translating strategy into scale. BMW has focused on localisation, pricing, and portfolio breadth, while competitors are balancing premium positioning with the need to build EV volumes, analysts said.

Yet, the broader luxury car market tells a different story. Mercedes-Benz retained its leadership in total passenger vehicle sales with 18,145 units in FY26, while BMW ranked second with 17,299 units, highlighting a structural shift as EVs begin to reshape competitive dynamics.

EV penetration within the luxury segment remains modest at 2.71 per cent, down from 3.08 per cent a year earlier, indicating that the transition is still at an early stage, infomed sectorial experts.

Published on April 2, 2026



Source link

India trading ban rocks 9 billion-a-day offshore rupee market

India trading ban rocks $149 billion-a-day offshore rupee market


India banned its banks from offering the most popular instrument for trading the rupee offshore, threatening to squeeze a $149 billion-a-day market in an extreme step to shore up its tumbling currency.

The Reserve Bank of India’s restrictions on non-deliverable derivative contracts will ripple through major currency hubs such as Singapore and London, where trading has exploded over the past decade to about twice the size of the onshore market. The rupee surged the most in 12 years on Thursday.

The policy adds to a late-Friday measure that capped lenders’ daily currency positions locally at $100 million, triggering a scramble among banks to unwind at least $30 billion in arbitrage trades. Such moves risk undercutting years of efforts to deepen India’s currency markets, where growing onshore and offshore liquidity has helped attract foreign investors and support Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s push to boost the rupee’s global use.

“This is again a signal that the central bank is willing to consider harsh steps that are nevertheless regressive and that its focus is on the stability of the rupee rather than liquidity for now,” said Abhishek Upadhyay, an economist at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership.

The regulator is going all out to squeeze a trade that it sees fueling speculative bets. Investors have typically used offshore contracts known as non-deliverable forwards to build short rupee positions, while banks run arbitrage trades — buying dollars onshore and selling them overseas — to profit from price gaps between the two. Those onshore dollar purchases can add pressure on the local currency, reinforcing the offshore bearish bets. 

This activity is mainly driven out of global financial hubs such as Singapore, London and New York, with international lenders like JPMorgan Chase & Co., Standard Chartered Plc, HSBC Holdings Plc and Citigroup Inc. dominating the space. Some Indian banks also participate.

The RBI measures amount to a coordinated push to flush out excess bearish rupee positions and speculative trades across the market, according to Kunal Sodhani, head of treasury at Shinhan Bank Ltd. in Mumbai. This may come at the cost of reduced liquidity and wider spreads between the onshore and offshore markets, he said.

“Overall, the RBI’s message is unambiguous,” he said. “The FX market is to function as a hedging mechanism aligned with real economic activity, not as a platform for leveraged speculation.”

The rupee has been hitting successive lows despite repeated intervention by the RBI, with pressure intensifying after the Iran war drove up India’s fuel import costs. It has tumbled about 8% over the past year, making it Asia’s worst-performing currency.

The rupee rebounded about 2% to 92.84 per dollar on Thursday as trading resumed after a two-day break. Earlier in the week, it had weakened past the 95 level. Meanwhile, offshore forward points, or the cost of hedging exposure to rupee assets outside India, are near their highest since 2020.

The twin policy surprises are an attempt to head off imported inflation with a stronger currency. Skyrocketing energy prices have fanned stagflation fears, with oil-importers like India particularly vulnerable. A widening trade deficit, combined with a stronger dollar, has only deepened pressure on the rupee. 

This puts the RBI in a dilemma. Raising interest rates to defend the currency may hurt economic growth, pushing policymakers to rely more on other tools. That includes stepping up intervention — which has already contributed to a more than $30 billion drawdown in FX reserves in the first three weeks of March — as well as more direct measures targeting financial institutions. The central bank is due to announce its next rate decision on April 8.

“The RBI cannot use monetary policy to fight this pressure as they are primarily focused on inflation management,” said Gaurav Kapur, chief economist of IndusInd Bank Ltd. That helps to explain the move to target the NDF market, he said, adding that the central bank still has other options, including a potential increase in the cash reserve ratio, as seen in 2013.

Bond Outflows

By curbing NDF activity, the central bank is driving up the cost of hedging currency risk, said Rajeev de Mello, a global macro portfolio manager at Gama Asset Management. That will discourage foreign participation in the local bond market, ultimately pushing up the government’s borrowing costs, he added.

Foreign interest in Indian debt has grown, with about $14 billion flowing into bonds since their inclusion in JPMorgan’s flagship index in June 2024, underscoring the need for hedging. But flows have taken a hit from the latest curbs. On Monday, index-eligible bonds saw outflows of 32.85 billion rupees ($352 million), the biggest single-day exit in 10 months.

A key question now is how long the RBI can sustain such measures. When it adopted similar measures in December 2011, the rupee strengthened from 54.3 to below 50 in about a month — but at the cost of liquidity drying up, said Madhavi Arora, chief economist at Emkay Global Financial Services Ltd. However, volumes recovered within a few months, and banks, after an initial hit to shares, rebounded strongly. 

“If the similar playbook follows this time around too, rupee would be a sharp gainer over next one week or so, as the banks unwind their speculative positions,” she said. While lenders may face short-term mark-to-market losses, once the currency stabilizes and liquidity conditions normalize, the focus will shift back to credit growth, she added.

This time, however, the impact could be more disruptive as the scale of FX operations has ballooned. 

“Ten years ago, people didn’t take such large positions,” said Jayesh Mehta, chief executive officer of DSP Finance Private Ltd. with more than three decades of experience in FX and bonds. Today, the size of trades — including relative-value bets across currencies — can dilute the effectiveness of the RBI’s interventions, he added.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

Published on April 2, 2026



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp