Double whammy for Indian share market — oil spikes and exchanges increase margin money needed for intra-day trade
Jan 3, 2020, 09:30 IST
- India's stock traders are staring at a gloomy friday with a series of bad of news.
- The spike in oil prices due to the escalating standoff between US and Iran will be bad news for a net importer like India.
- Further, the stock exchanges have mandated that intra-day traders have to pay up the entire initial margin before placing the order, which is likely to curb trading volumes.
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India's stock traders are staring at a gloomy friday with a series of bad of news. Nifty opened the day about a fourth of a percent down at a time when most participants were hoping for a new all-time high for India's benchmark indices.The spike in oil prices due to the escalating standoff between US and Iran will be bad news for a net importer like India. Further, the stock exchanges have mandated that intra-day traders have to pay up the entire initial margin before placing the order, which is likely to curb trading volumes.
Earlier this morning, Iraq media reported that a top Iranian general reportedly killed in Baghdad airstrike, days after US embassy siege. Pentagon, the headquarter of United States Department of Defense, later confirmed that a powerful commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps, Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, was killed in a strike on the Baghdad International Airport early Friday.
The rising tension in the middle east has led to a sharp 3% spike in crude oil prices, which is bad news for a net importer like India, which buys over 80% of its oil needs overseas. This leads to higher inflation for consumers, where the sentiment is already at a 6-year low.
Further, the dollar index hit a one-month high today and a stronger US dollar would mean bad news for exporters.
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The shares of Bombay Stock Exchange opened nearly half a percent lower.
All this comes as a shocker for Indian investors who closed Thursday's trading session on a high. The Sensex rallied over 320 points while the Nifty ended at a fresh lifetime high led by index-heavyweights like Reliance Industries and HDFC, HDFC Bank thanks to a buoyant mood globally.
When inflation expectations rise, the bond yields rise too. This will hurt Indian banks which hold a lot of government bonds. So, the impact of that may be visible in banking stocks today.
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