Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI:After Monday’s green-by-the-bell recovery, Tuesday belonged to caution. The Sensex closed 561.46 points lower at 77,054.94, down 0.72%, and the Nifty 50 shed 158.95 points to settle at 24,052.05, off 0.66%, as a fresh jump in crude and the deepening West Asia standoff pulled sentiment down. It was an orderly retreat rather than a rout — a market pricing risk, not panicking at it.
The pressure was broad but its source was narrow: oil. With Brent above $85, the sectors most sensitive to energy costs and global risk led the decline, and foreign institutional investors turned net sellers for the first time in eight sessions, with outflows of roughly ₹3,060 crore. The steadying counterweight, as so often through this cycle, was the deep domestic bid that has repeatedly absorbed foreign selling on days exactly like this one.
A market that steps back in an orderly way on a real risk is doing its job. The domestic investor base is the floor that keeps the retreat from becoming a rout.
The durable point for the long-term saver is that a single risk-off session driven by events abroad does not rewrite India’s fundamentals — sector-leading growth, near-target inflation and a deepening base of domestic investors. Crude is the swing variable to watch: a sustained premium would pressure the rupee and imported inflation, which is exactly why the day’s move was a rational adjustment rather than a verdict.
The constructive read is that resilience is visible even on a down day. Volatility imported from a distant strait is the price of admission for an open, oil-importing economy; breadth, quality and a patient domestic bid remain the reply — and Tuesday’s orderly close was a quiet demonstration of all three.










