Top 10 Sensex losers have tanked over 20 per cent, while 5 among these have plunged over 30 per cent since October 2021
Tracking overnight slump in the Wall Street, the worst selloff seen since June 2020, analysts believe that the markets will remain on edge over fears of recession and concerns of a hawkish US Fed
These negative returns have largely been triggered by panic selling by new investors who exited in droves in the backdrop of rising interest rates, inflation worries and the geopolitical tensions
Tech Mahindra and Wipro have tumbled over 30 per cent, while Apollo Hospitals Enterprise and Dr. Reddy's Laboratories have plummeted 22 per cent so far in calendar year 2022 (CY22)
Rising bond yields, fears of aggressive rate hikes by global central banks, and Covid-19 scare in China are among the key pain-points for investors
The Nifty index is now below its 200-DMA level and is near the support zone of 16,800. Severe corrections may happen if it slips below this level
The US Federal Reserve has indicated that they will begin hiking interest rates in the near future and that there will be multiple rate hikes this year.
The BSE Midcap and Smallcap indices were up around 1.5 per cent each. Metal, IT, Consumer Durables indices logged smart gains
Analysts expect the downtrend to be arrested soon and steep correction will lead to value buying at lower levels
Debutant Latent View Analytics ended with a gain of 147.5 per cent. Overall market breadth was extremely positive
In across the board selling by the investors, the benchmark indices tumbled for a third day while volatility shot up ahead of the US Federal Reserve outcome later today and Thursday's F&O expiry
Benchmark indices drop 3% before settling 1.8% lower, amid Covid-19 surge, new restrictions
Barring shares of Dr Reddy's Labs, all constituents of the 30-pack index traded in the red
The next support for the Nifty Bank index is at 30,000. Any breach of the same may result in a bearish trend towards 28,000-mark
The Sensex fell 1,708 points, or 3.4 per cent, to end the session at 47,883 -- the lowest close since January 29 -- while the Nifty 50 index closed at 14,311, declining 524 points, or 3.5 per cent
We caught up with Gaurav Dua and Aamar Deo Singh to understand where are the markets headed, what should be the investment strategy and which sectors and stocks look good to park one's money in
Index heavyweights such as Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank, HDFC, ICICI Bank, SBI, Bajaj Finance, TCS, and L&T declined up to 7 per cent.
On Monday, the markets tumbled with the frontline indices - the S&P BSE Sensex and the Nifty50 - slipping over 2 per cent each in intraday trade
Investors' wealth tumbled over Rs 2.16 trillion at close of trade on Monday as markets crashed amid a sharp spike in coronavirus cases in the country
The selling in the market was mostly broad-based, with only stocks from the information technology (IT) sector managing to hold their head above water