Stock Market Updates: Sensex Down Over 800 Points In Pre-Open, Nifty Below 22,300

Indian equities opened lower on Tuesday, following a broad sell-off across Asian markets after Wall Street took a hit overnight

featured-image

Indian equities opened lower on Tuesday, following a broad sell-off across Asian markets after Wall Street took a hit overnight Sensex Today: Indian equities opened lower on Tuesday, following a broad sell-off across Asian markets after Wall Street took a hit overnight due to concerns that the US economy may be heading toward a recession. Global Cues The decline was triggered by US President Donald Trump’s refusal to comment on whether a recession was imminent, amid growing worries over his tariff policies, which added to investor fears about global economic stability. Dow Jones tanks 900 points, Nasdaq sees worst day since September 2022 The Dow Jones fell nearly 900 points on Monday, March 10, as Wall Street witnessed a painful trading session over looming fears of a recession in the US.

This is the biggest single-day fall of 2025 for the 30-stock index. The S&P 500 fell nearly 3% and has now declined to a six-month low, the lowest since September last year. The Nasdaq, the tech-heavy index also fell 4%, reporting its biggest single-day fall since September 2022.



At one point during the session, the Dow Jones was down 1,100 points. With Monday’s fall, the S&P 500 is nearing correction territory, having declined 9% from its top. A 10% fall from the top indicates entering “correction territory.

" The Nasdaq Composite has now corrected 14% from its recent peak, while the Russell 2000 is on the verge of entering a bear market, having declined 18% from its recent highs. A 20% fall from the peak indicates a “bear market." Ongoing uncertainty surrounding US tariffs has intensified inflation concerns in the world’s largest economy, further affecting global growth and dragging down equity markets across the globe year-to-date.

Reflecting similar losses, shares in the Asia-Pacific region plunged by as much as 3% in Tuesday morning trading. Japan’s Nikkei fell 2.6%, with the revised Q4 GDP update showing a growth of 2.

2%, below the expected 2.8%. The Taiwan Weighted Index also dropped nearly 3%, while both the Hang Seng and Kospi lost over 2% each.

The Straits Times Index saw a decline of 1.5%, and Australia’s ASX 200 and All Ordinaries were down by up to 2% each..