Business Standard

Sensex crashes 1,000 pts on mounting inflation worries

FPIS sell shares worth ~4,000 crore; US inflation hits new 4-decade high

- SUNDAR SETHURAMAN

Mumbai, 10 June

Indian markets slumped along with global peers on Friday amid nervousnes­s ahead of the release of US inflation data. The Sensex closed at 54,303, down 1,017 points, or 1.84 per cent — the most since May 19, while the Nifty50 index ended the session at 16,202 with a decline of 276 points, or 1.7 per cent. Both the indices dropped over 2.5 per cent during the week, ending their three-week winning streak.

Foreign portfolio investors (FPIS) sold shares worth nearly ~4,000 crore on Friday as the rupee hit a fresh low against the US dollar. After pulling out nearly ~40,000 crore from the markets in May, FPIS have sold shares worth nearly ~20,000 crore so far this month.

Data released after Indian market hours showed that US consumer inflation climbed to a new four-decade high of 8.6 per cent in May as surging energy and food prices moved higher. The annual rate of inflation has soared globally in recent months amid supply disruption­s, prompting central banks to aggressive­ly tighten monetary policy.

US stocks tumbled and Treasury

yields spiked after the unexpected­ly hot consumer-prices reading fuelled bets the Federal Reserve would have to step up its battle against inflation.

The Dow Jones was down 2.2 per cent as of 20:50 IST, while the S&P 500 sank 2.6 per cent. The tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 slipped more than 3 per cent in early trade.

“The negative surprise in the US consumer price data means investors will start pricing in a more hawkish stance by the Federal Reserve,” said U R Bhat, cofounder, Alphaniti Fintech.

Shanghai’s decision to lock down seven districts this weekend to conduct mass Covid-19 tests also weighed on sentiment. The weekend lockdown is the first major restrictio­n on movement after China exited a two-month shutdown earlier this month. The decision came after new infection cases were detected in China's financial hub.

Crude oil slipped on Friday as China imposed new lockdown measures and US inflation rose more than expected, but crude prices remained on track for another weekly gain. Brent crude was down over 2 per cent to $120 a barrel at 2050 IST. “The lockdown announceme­nt in Shanghai is a shock. People thought things were back to normal,” said Bhat.

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