Moreover, the rupee again breaching the 67-level against the dollar weighed on trading sentiment.
Mid-cap and small-cap indices fell 0.50 per cent and 0.45 per cent, respectively, on sustained selling pressure from retail investors.
Government data on Friday showed that industrial output contracted 0.8 per cent in April, the first decline in three months, due to drastic fall in capital goods production. Participants also took a cautious line ahead of the release of consumer inflation data.
Global markets also continued to fall on renewed worries over the fate of Britain in the European Union, as also upcoming meetings of central banks in the US and Japan.
"With global visibility reducing, investors looking for domestic cues, would be eyeing the finance ministers' meet in Kolkata on 14-15 June on GST, as well as revenue Gyan Sangam on 16-17 June," added James.
The 50-issue NSE Nifty tumbled 59.45 points or 0.73 per cent to close 8,110.60 after cracking below the 8100-level to hit a low of 8,063.90.
ICICI Bank suffered the most by diving 3.38 per cent to Rs 244.10 followed Tata Steel at 3.33 per cent to Rs 323.80.
In regional markets, Japanese stocks led decline by diving 3.51 per cent to a two-month low in Asian equities as rally in the yen hammered exporters. Key indices in China, Hong Kong and Singapore dropped by up to 3.21 per cent.
over as the country's new prime minister, which could restore a semblance of order in the financial market following the UK's decision to leave the European Union.
US stocks racked up overnight gains, with Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 both finishing at record high, mirroring hopes of stimulus from Japan and China along with optimism that the Bank of England will cut rates to help the UK economy sidestep pitfalls of the Brexit vote.
The market breadth remained negative as 1,727 stocks ended in the red, 1,018 stocks closed in the green while 164 stocks ruled steady.
