MUMBAI : Indian markets plunged on Tuesday as global funds sold heavily in HDFC Bank Ltd and Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL), and retail investors booked profits in smaller stocks, erasing investor wealth of ₹8.56 trillion. The carnage may not be over, though: The derivatives market and the domestic fear index continue to flash signals of turbulence ahead. HDFC Bank and RIL, which command the highest weights in benchmark indices and clocked disappointing earnings in the December quarter, contributed to almost half (48.63%) of the Sensex’s 1,053.10, or 1.47%, fall to 70,370.55.
The Nifty 50 tanked 333 points, or 1.54%, to 21,238.80. Heavy retail profit-booking in the broader markets dragged down the Nifty Midcap 150 and the Nifty Smallcap 250 indices the most in a month to 17,204.35, down 2.9%, and 14,217.35, down 2.7%, respectively. The Bank Nifty fell 2.26% to 45,015.05, after disappointing third-quarter results from top lenders.
The crash came a day after India’s market capitalization of $4.33 trillion crossed Hong Kong’s $4.29 trillion, making it the fourth-largest stock market worldwide. The latest value of the Hong Kong market on Tuesday was not available at press time. “Profit-booking has caught up with companies whose results have disappointed the Street or where corporate governance issues have cropped up," said Nilesh Shah, managing director, Kotak Mahindra AMC.
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