ET Market Watch: Sensex slumps 721 pts, Nifty below 24,850; 5 factors why markets crashed
Hi, you're listening to ET Markets Radio, I am your host Neha V Mahajan. Welcome to a fresh episode of ET Market Watch -- where we bring you the latest news from the world of stock markets every single day. Let's get to it:
Sensex tanked 721 pts while Nifty50 slipped below 24,850. Here's what dragged Dalal Street down:
1. Financial Stocks Hit Hard
Bajaj Finance plunged nearly 5% after Q1 results raised red flags around MSME loans.
Other lenders such as HDFC Bank, SBI, Kotak, Axis also fell.
Nifty Financial Services Index down over 0.9%.
2. US-India Trade Deal Stalled
No breakthrough on tariffs.
The August 1 deadline looms, uncertainty rising.
Trade talks stuck on dairy & agri terms.
3. FII Sell-off Continues
FIIs have dumped ₹11,572 crore in just 4 sessions.
Heavy outflows + smallcap correction = weak market sentiment.
4. India-UK FTA Signed, BUT...
Sectors like textiles & autos may benefit.
But lack of clarity on the US front means no immediate boost for markets.
5. Weak Global Cues
Asian indices dipped across the board.
Hang Seng -1.1%, Nikkei -0.8%, ASX -0.5%.
Investors cautious ahead of US Fed meeting & Big Tech earnings.
M-Cap Loss: ₹6.5 lakh crore gone in a day.
Stay tuned. Volatility isn't going anywhere.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
3 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Nitin Gadkari to speak at The Hindu MIND today
Minister for Road Transport and Highways Nitin Gadkari will be the guest on Wednesday for The Hindu MIND, a conversation series featuring leading newsmakers. Popularly known as the 'Expressway Man of India', Mr. Gadkari is a strong advocate of biofuels and non-conventional energy sources to enhance India's energy security. His appearance comes amid the government's aggressive push for ethanol-blended petrol and electric vehicles. The Minister is expected to address issues such as the toll tax hikes on national highways, which have raised concerns among commuters. A firm believer in safer road travel, Mr. Gadkari has set an ambitious target to reduce road accidents by 50% by 2030. His Ministry recently rolled out the Bharat New Car Safety Assessment Programme to evaluate vehicle crash safety. Mr. Gadkari has also been a vocal critic of poor road engineering, substandard project reports, and negligent concessionaires, factors he says contribute significantly to India's road fatalities. The full interview will be available on


India Today
22 minutes ago
- India Today
Trump's tariff threats: Are we heading for an all-out India-US tariff war? Experts debate
As US President Donald Trump issues a fresh warning of levying additional tariffs on India within the next 24 hours for purchasing oil from Russia, we raise these questions on the show: are we now heading for an all-out India-US tariff war? Should the Modi government now simply stare down Donald Trump and call him out? Are America's double standards being exposed or is Indian foreign policy finding itself on the back foot? Watch as experts debate on News Today.

Economic Times
an hour ago
- Economic Times
US stocks tick higher on rate cut hopes; earnings in spotlight
Wall Street is holding steadier on Tuesday following its see-saw ride that bracketed the weekend. ADVERTISEMENT The S&P 500 was inching up by 0.1% in early trading, coming off its best day since May, which followed its worst day since May. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 77 points, or 0.2%, as of 9:35 a.m. Eastern time, and the Nasdaq composite was 0.1% higher. Worries are still high that President Donald Trump's tariffs may be hurting the economy. But increased hopes for cuts to interest rates by the Federal Reserve later this year, along with a stream of stronger-than-expected profit reports from U.S. companies, are helping to support the market. Palantir Technologies helped lead the way after the provider of artificial-intelligence platforms reported a stronger profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected. The AI darling also raised its forecast for revenue over the full year, and its stock climbed 7.5% after it had already doubled for the year so far coming into the day.'We continue to see the astonishing impact of AI leverage,' CEO Alex Karp rose 4.5% after the chemical company likewise topped analysts' expectations for profit and revenue. It also raised its forecast for profit over the full year, even though it's expecting to take a $20 million hit because of tariffs in the second half of 2025. ADVERTISEMENT They helped to offset a 0.7% slip for Yum Brands after the company behind KFC, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut reported results for the latest quarter that came up just short of analysts' & Hers Health tumbled 12.2% even though the telehealth company reported a profit that topped analysts' expectations. Its revenue fell short of forecasts. ADVERTISEMENT The pressure is on companies to report bigger profits after the U.S. stock market surged to record after record from a low point in April. The big rally fueled criticism that the broad market had become too stock prices to look like better bargains, either companies need to produce bigger profits, or interest rates need to fall. The latter may happen in September, when the Federal Reserve has its next meeting. ADVERTISEMENT Expectations have built sharply for a rate cut at that meeting since a report on the U.S. job market Friday came in much weaker than economists expected. Lower interest rates would make stocks look less expensive, while also giving the overall economy a boost, but the potential downside is that they could push inflation yields sank sharply after Friday's release of the jobs report, and they haven't recovered. The yield on the 10-year Treasury was holding at 4.22%, where it was late Monday and down from 4.39% just before the release of the jobs report. ADVERTISEMENT In stock markets abroad, indexes rose across much of Europe and Asia. India's Sensex was an outlier and dipped 0.4% on concerns over trade tensions with the United States as the Trump administration pushes for cutbacks in the country's oil purchases from Russia. (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)