Mumbai, Jan 20, 2026, 21:48 IST
- Sensex slipped 1,065.71 points, closing at 82,180.47, while Nifty 50 declined 1.38% to finish at 25,232.50
- BSE-listed stocks lost roughly ₹9.86 lakh crore (₹9.86 trillion) in market value during the session
- Hundreds of shares plunged to new 52-week lows as analysts pointed to critical support levels between 25,150 and 25,080 on the Nifty.
Indian equities dropped sharply on Tuesday, with the Sensex and Nifty 50 marking their lowest finishes in over three months. The selloff erased roughly 9.86 lakh crore rupees in market value from companies listed on the BSE. The Sensex closed 1.28% lower at 82,180.47, while the Nifty 50 slipped 1.38% to 25,232.50. (The Times of India)
The decline is significant now—it’s moved beyond a simple large-cap hiccup. Foreign selling and a patchy earnings season are dragging the broader market lower, while investors watch closely to see how much domestic buying can soak up the selling pressure.
Trade-war chatter is now routine in the daily tape. The Times of India connected the decline to U.S. tariff threats and steady foreign outflows, coupled with disappointing corporate earnings and a cautious market mood.
Breadth turned ugly. Over 490 stocks on the NSE hit 52-week lows, Upstox reported — including names like IRCTC, Patanjali Foods, Kaynes Technology, Havells India, and Tejas Networks. India VIX, the market’s volatility gauge, climbed 4.6% to 12.37, signaling rising stress. (Upstox – Online Stock and Share Trading)
Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs), also known as overseas funds, kept selling, with domestic institutions snapping up shares, Upstox reported earlier. This trend has heightened daily volatility and squeezed tolerance for earnings disappointments.
Moneycontrol reported the Sensex plunged as much as 1,235.6 points during the session, while the Nifty recorded its sharpest single-day drop since April 7, 2025, closing at levels not seen since October 15, 2025. Realty, auto, and IT stocks were among the biggest losers. Meanwhile, midcap and smallcap indexes slipped by up to 3%, according to the report. (Moneycontrol)
Ajit Mishra, senior vice president (research) at Religare Broking, noted that the Nifty is hovering near its 200 DEMA — a key long-term moving average — at about 25,150. “A brief pause or rebound cannot be ruled out,” he added.
SBI Securities’ Sudeep Shah noted the daily RSI, a momentum indicator signaling “oversold” levels, dropped to 29.27—its lowest since March 2025. He cautioned that if the index breaks below 25,080, it might fall further toward 24,900.
The risk is straightforward: if long-term support breaks, selling could spiral. It gets trickier if foreign outflows continue and tariff rhetoric intensifies, forcing domestic buyers to shoulder more of the burden.
So far, any rebound must break through the immediate ceiling. Analysts pointed to the 25,400–25,600 range on the Nifty as the closest resistance, with the direction of banking and IT stocks likely to determine if the relief holds or fizzles out.