Consumer durables, auto, FMCG, metal and banking stocks fell the most, while a depreciating rupee against the US dollar also weighed on sentiments.
The NSE Nifty also slipped below the 9,100-mark, as the markets remained on a downward path for the third day.
Brokers said that the mood was downcast after reports suggested India's GDP may grow at a slower rate of 6.7 per cent in the current quarter, while cues were negative from the global markets where investors remained cautious following the news of North Korea failing a nuclear test and developments on the US President Donald Trump's tax cut probability.
Markets worldwide have been under pressure on concerns about Donald Trump's ability to deliver his key economy-boosting policies, brokers said.
The Sensex, which had lost 163.54 points in the previous two sessions, dropped another 317.77 points, or 1.08 per cent, to end today at 29,167.68 -- its lowest closing since March 10. It saw the biggest one-day slump since December 2 last year when it had lost 329.26 points.
Mid-cap and small-cap indices fell 0.95 per cent and 0.90 per cent, respectively, on sustained selling pressure from retail investors.
Among blue-chips, Bharti Airtel suffered the most by diving 3.18 per cent to Rs 338.50.
Other major losers included Tata Motors, ITC, ICICI Bank and Bajaj Auto, all of which dropped more than 2 per cent. Besides, M&M, SBI L&T and Maruti Suzuki also lost value.
However, Lupin, Wipro, Cipla, Sun Pharma, Dr Reddy's and Hindustan Unilver ended in the green and cushioned the overall fall of the Sensex.
Anupam Singhi, COO of William O'Neil India said, "The benchmark indices extended losses for a third straight session, amid weak global market cues. The same trend was observed on peer share markets as investors remained cautious following the news of North Korea failing a nuclear test and developments on the US President Donald Trump's tax cut probability."
Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) are believed to have sold heavily today. They had bought shares worth a net Rs 1,662.72 crore yesterday, as per the provisional data.
Domestic institutional investors (DIIs) had sold shares worth a net Rs 798.57 crore yesterday.
Globally, Asian stocks posted their biggest drop in two weeks tracking overnight losses on the Wall Street. Japanese stocks led the decline by diving 2.13 per cent. Key indices in China, Hong Kong and Singapore dropped by up to 1.18 per cent.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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