Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Stocks continue to dive as inflation marches ahead

- Ujjval Jauhari ujjval.j@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Fears of aggressive interest rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve following unexpected­ly high inflation in the world’s largest economy lashed global stock markets on Thursday, sending Indian benchmark indices crashing by 2.22%.

While the BSE Sensex index plunged 1,158 points to close at 52,930.31 points, the broader Nifty index fell 359 points to close at 15,808 points. The fall in equities was accompanie­d by a decline in the rupee, which hit a record low of 77.63 against the dollar on similar concerns. India VIX, or the fear index, shot up 6% to hit a seven-week high, indicating that uncertaint­y may continue for some more time.

“Inflation continues to be a major concern for the markets,” said Siddhartha Khemka, head, retail research, Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. “Weakening economic growth outlook, the prolonged Russiaukra­ine War, volatility in commodity prices, continued FII selling and rising bond yields have dented investors’ sentiments. Nifty has corrected by 15% from its 52-week high. On the other hand, Nifty Midcap 100 and Smallcap 100 indices witnessed deeper cuts - down 19% and 28% from their respective highs, entering a bear grip,” Khemka said.

On Thursday, the Dollar Index touched a 20-year high of 104.5, and the Nifty is now retesting its March low of 15,671, which analysts said can further add to the downside. However, they said equity markets are currently in the oversold territory after the sharp declines in the last few trading sessions.

Official data released later in the day showed April retail inflation at an eight-year high of 7.79%. Besides, growth concerns in China due to covid restrictio­ns, and the ongoing conflict in Ukraine that has led to supply side bottleneck­s, are expected to weigh heavily on investor sentiments in the foreseeabl­e future.

“USD-INR spot touched a fresh all-time high of 77.62, after higher-than-expected inflation print in the US pushed the Dollar Index to a fresh 20-year high. Weakness in equities was an add-on the force for the US dollar,” said Anindya Banerjee, vice-president, currency derivative­s & interest rate derivative­s at Kotak Securities Ltd. “We suspect RBI may have sold dollars to stem the decline in the Indian rupee,” added Banerjee. Along with the Nifty and Sensex, the global markets corrected significan­tly on Thursday, as other Asian indices such as Taiwan TAIEX, Nikkei, Jakarta Composite, Shanghai Composite and Hang Seng all ended 0.12-3.14% % lower on Thursday.

In India, foreign portfolio investors remain net sellers, having sold Rs 1,48,203.48 crore worth of equity in 2022 till 11 May. This is adding to pressure on the rupee and the markets. Meanwhile, Brent crude at $106.14 levels is eroding corporate margins.

“The pressure of increased inflation on corporate earnings is quite visible since the last two quarters and is expected to continue for another 1-2 quarters,” said Sushant Bhansali, CEO, Ambit Asset Management.

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