Currency market was hit hard, with the rupee down 57 paise to a five-month low of 67.82 against the US currency during the day.
Sentiment continued to be weighed down by the government's move last week to withdraw high-value currency notes and disappointing quarterly earnings by some more blue-chip companies, brokers said.
In a surprise move, the government had banned Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes in a bid to curb black money.
The NSE Nifty fell sharply by 187.85 points, or 2.26 per cent, to 8,108.45, its lowest closing since June 27 when it settled at 8,094.70. Intra-day, it cracked below the 8,100-mark to hit a low of 8,093.20.
Persistent capital outflows from EMs amid all major Asian currencies declining against the US dollar since Trump's shock win in the US presidential election on November 8 was another factor behind the big plunge on the domestic bourses.
Meanwhile, government data released on Friday showed that industrial production grew a meagre 0.7 per cent in September, mainly due to poor show by manufacturing and mining sectors coupled with decline in capital goods output.
Both the stock exchanges, BSE and NSE, remained closed yesterday on account of Guru Nanak Jayanti.
Malaysia's ringgit and South Korea's won lost at least 2.8 percent each. A gauge of the greenback erased its losses this year as US Treasury yields surged on speculation that Trump's pro-growth policies would boost inflation and push interest rates higher.
However, when all the sectors fared poorly, only BSE IT index managed to keep its head up, logging gains of 0.30 per cent. This uptick was fuelled by buying in Wipro, TCS and Infosys, rising by up to 1.27 per cent.
Tata Motors was the biggest loser from the Sensex pack on the day -- sinking 9.88 per cent to Rs 457.25 after the company's standalone net loss widened to Rs 631 crore in the September quarter.
Meanwhile, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold shares worth a net Rs 1,493.27 crore last Friday, as per provisional data.
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