Business Standard

Markets get the shivers

SENSEX TUMBLES 2,919 POINTS, BIGGEST-EVER IN ABSOLUTE TERMS OVER ~11 TRILLION WORTH OF INVESTOR WEALTH WIPED OUT GLOBAL STOCK ROUT DEEPENS AMID GROWTH CONCERNS

- SUNDAR SETHURAMAN

The carnage in the stock markets, triggered by the spread of coronaviru­s, intensifie­d after the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) officially declared the outbreak of COVID-19 a pandemic. The domestic benchmark indices slumped over 8 per cent — the most since October 2008 — as investors fretted over the virus’s economic toll. The extreme risk-aversion wiped out ~11.4 trillion worth of investor wealth and sent many stocks and key indices to their multi-year lows.

The Nifty plunged 868 points, or 8.3 per cent, to 9,590, the lowest close since June 2017, while the Sensex dropped 2,919 points, or 8.2 per cent, to end at 32,778, the lowest close in two years. The Indian markets have now joined other global peers in “bear territory”, having crashed 20 per cent from the recent peak.

Most global markets tumbled on Thursday, with some even triggering trading halts, as the virus spread to 114 countries, affecting 118,000 and claiming over 4,300 lives. The WHO said it expected the number of cases, deaths and affected countries to climb even higher, prompting nations to impose travel restrictio­ns and taking other drastic steps to isolate people at the cost of hurting economic activity.

The Dow Jones index of the US was on course for its worst performanc­e since Wall Street's “Black Monday” crash of 1987, as President Donald Trump's move to curb travel from Europe added to growing corporate distress over the coronaviru­s pandemic. The index was down over 8 per cent as of 12:20 am (IST).

The SGX Nifty slipped below 9,000 after the US market dropped in opening trade. This could mean another day of carnage in the Indian markets when it opens on Friday.

“The markets are gripped by panic. Everybody is staring at uncertaint­y, with even mature markets like the US and Europe reacting violently. We are seeing a chain reaction,” said Motilal Oswal, chairman and managing director, Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

Market players said while valuations of many stocks had become attractive compared to historical levels, the uncertaint­y about the kind of damage the virus would cause to the economy and corporate earnings was stopping people from taking large buy positions.

“Everyone is worried about where the virus is going and what are the implicatio­ns. It overshadow­s all the positives. No one knows what is happening to the world. It is more of fear of the unknown driving markets at the moment, and the fear negates any rational thinking,” said Andrew Holland, CEO, Avendus Capital Alternate Strategies.

Experts said overseas investors were offloading stocks at whatever value, fearing that the markets would fall further and it could be a long road to recovery.

Overseas investors pulled out ~3,475 crore on Thursday, taking their last 13-day selling to nearly ~37,000 crore. Domestic investors provided buying support to the tune of ~3,918 crore. Nearly half the 2,500 stocks that traded on the BSE ended at at least their one-year low. Nearly 550 stocks got locked in lower circuit and nearly 23 stocks declined for every one that advanced.

In absolute terms, Thursday’s fall in the Sensex was the worst-ever, breaking the record for the worst fall in points term two sessions ago.

Index heavyweigh­ts such as HDFC Bank, Reliance Industries and HDFC dropped around 8 per cent each and dragged the Sensex lower by over 1,000 points. State Bank of India dropped 13 per cent, most among the Sensex components, followed by ONGC, which fell 12.6 per cent.

All the 19 BSE sectoral indices fell. The oil, realty and banking gauges dropped over 9 per cent each.

 ?? Source: Bloomberg/exchange Compiled by BS Research Bureau ??
Source: Bloomberg/exchange Compiled by BS Research Bureau
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India