BSE Sensex ends below 85,000, Nifty slips under 26,000 amid selling in oil & gas and IT stocks
Mumbai | December 29 — Economy India Desk: Domestic equity markets in India ended sharply lower on Monday, weighed down by foreign institutional investor (FII) selling, subdued trade volumes ahead of year-end, and heavy losses in key sectors such as oil & gas and information technology (IT). The benchmark BSE Sensex declined by 345.91 points (0.41%), closing at 84,695.54, while the Nifty 50 index dropped below the 26,000 mark once again.
Investor caution dominated the session as earnings season wrapped up and traders held back participation in the final week of calendar 2025. Broad market sentiment was further dampened by a rise in crude oil prices, geopolitical uncertainties, and risk-off flows from global funds.

Market Benchmarks: Sensex & Nifty Performance
The market benchmarks recorded broad-based weakness throughout the trading day:
| Index | Previous Close | Monday Close | Change | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BSE Sensex | 85,041.45 | 84,695.54 | –345.91 | –0.41% |
| Nifty 50 | 26,100.00 (approx) | Under 26,000 | – | – |
During the session, the Sensex hit an intraday low of 84,637.86, down 403.59 points at one stage before trimming losses marginally at the close.
Sectoral Trends: Oil & Gas, IT Lead Losses
Sell-offs were concentrated in a few key segments:
Oil & Gas
Energy stocks underperformed as crude prices found support in global markets, pressuring downstream margins and investor sentiment in India’s oil and gas universe.
IT Stocks
The IT sector, which has been a consistent outperformer this year, saw profit-booking pressure. The combination of currency concerns and delayed deal cycles reportedly weighed on investor confidence.
Other sectors such as banking, auto, and real estate showed mixed performance, with selective buying in midcaps and defensive plays, but overall market risk appetite remained weak.
Foreign Institutional Investors: Net Sellers
FIIs continued to trim equity positions, extending a trend seen over the past few sessions. Analysts attribute this to:
- Year-end portfolio rebalancing
- Risk aversion amid global macro pressures
- Profit-taking after strong run in certain segments earlier in the year
Net FII selling added to the downward bias, especially in large-cap stocks that are part of global benchmarks.

Thin Volumes Weigh on Market Depth
Trading activity was notably subdued, with lower participation from retail and domestic institutional investors (DIIs). Thin volumes typically magnify price movements and exacerbate volatility, particularly late in the calendar year when many market participants reduce exposure.
The lack of major domestic triggers — such as macroeconomic data or corporate earnings — further contributed to the lethargic trade.
Global Cues: Mixed International Markets
Global equity markets presented a mixed picture ahead of Monday’s India session:
- U.S. markets showed limited directional bias on Friday, with gains in some indices offset by sector-specific weakness.
- European and Asian markets were largely cautious as traders awaited key economic data and central bank signals for the new year.
This global caution filtered into Indian indices, particularly as FIIs adopted a risk-off stance.
Expert Commentaries
Market strategists offered measured insights into the session’s decline:
“The sell-off in oil & gas and IT stocks reflects profit-booking after a positive rally earlier in the year. Combined with reduced market volumes and FII selling, it is natural for benchmarks to revisit support levels,” said a senior equity analyst.
Another market observer added:
“While the near-term trend is weak, selective value buying in defensive segments may emerge if broader economic cues remain stable.”
Key Support & Resistance Levels
Technical analysts identified critical levels for market direction in the short term:
- Sensex Support: 84,000 – 83,500
- Sensex Resistance: 86,000 – 86,500
- Nifty Support: 25,800 – 25,600
- Nifty Resistance: 26,300 – 26,500
Breach of these levels could dictate directional momentum in early 2026.
Economy India Perspective
With the calendar year drawing to a close, the market’s slow and cautious stance reflects typical year-end risk management behavior. FIIs are locking in gains or repositioning portfolios, while domestic traders prefer to wait for new macro catalysts and policy clarity.
Looking ahead, investors will closely watch:
- Crude oil price trends
- Global monetary policy signals
- Domestic inflation and GDP data
- Upcoming corporate earnings
These factors are likely to shape market tone as India’s stock markets enter 2026.
(Economy India)






