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Sensex Plunges 400 Points further; Nifty Tanks Below 26000. Dalal Street Suffers Sharp Sell-Off; Fed Uncertainty Triggers Foreign Outflows And Profit Booking

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Sensex Plunges 610 Points; Nifty Tanks Below 26000!

Ahead of the US Fed’s decision on Wednesday, investor sentiment was further eroded by the ongoing pullout of foreign funds.

Today, Tuesday, Indian equities took a sharp downfall as selling pressure intensified across the board. The Sensex dropped down 436.41 points or 0.51 percent at 84,666.28.

The Nifty followed a similar path sliding down 120.89 points or 0.47 percent at 25,839.65.

Today again Market sentiments remained bit negative as about 1988 shares advanced, 1127 shares declined, and 94 shares unchanged.

NIFTY 50 Market Map

On Monday, The Sensex fell 609.68 points, or 0.71 percent, to reach 85,102.69. It fell 836.78 points, or 0.97 percent, during the day to reach the intraday low of 84,875.59.

The Nifty fell 225.90 points, or 0.86 percent, to close at 25,960.55, ending a two-day winning streak.

As investors booked profits across small and midcap equities, the stock benchmark indices fell as much as 1% intraday on Monday. Index heavyweights also saw sharp selling.

During the intraday sessions, It fell 1.12 percent, or 294.2 points, to a low of 25,892.25. Sector-wise, every index finished lower, with the biggest drops being in real estate, metal, and energy sector. Even more severely impacted was the overall market, as the midcap index slide by about 2%, while the smallcap index slide by almost 2.6%.

Tech Mahindra, HCL Technologies, Reliance Industries, and HDFC Bank are the top gainers.

Bharat Electronics Ltd., Eternal, Trent, Tata Steel, Bajaj Finance, Adani Ports, Bajaj Finserv, State Bank of India, PowerGrid, Asian Paints, Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles, Titan, NTPC, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Larsen & Toubro, and Bharti Airtel were among the top losers.

Market sentiments remained negative as about 919 shares advanced, 3190 shares declined and 172 shares unchanged.

Key factors behind market fall :

Tricky uncertainty ahead of US Fed meet:

The investors stayed on the sidelines ahead of the Fed’s two-day meeting beginning December 9.The Fed is widely expected to deliver its third straight quarter-point 25 bps rate cut due to negative employment growth that remains too low to keep up with labour supply growth and a rising unemployment rate.

Additionally, “other measures of labour market tightness have weakened more on average, and some alternative data measures of layoffs have begun to rise recently, presenting a new and potentially more serious downside risk.”

Asian markets opened mildly weak today morning with Nikkei down 0.10% and Kospi lower by 0.27%, reflecting a cautious undertone ahead of central bank decisions.

GIFT Nifty opened near 26,331, indicating a steady but guarded start for Indian markets. For India, the Fed outcome remains critical for rupee movement and FII flows. While the currency remains under pressure in the In the near term, India’s macro strength continues to stand out, supported by the RBI’s recent rate cut and improving domestic liquidity conditions.

Continues FII outflows

On Friday, foreign institutional investors continued their selling trend by selling stocks valued at Rs 438.90 crore, marking the sixth consecutive session of net outflows.

Chief Investment Strategist V K Vijayakumar of Geojit Investments Limited claims that FIIs have been compelled to consistently sell Indian stocks due to the ongoing depreciation of the rupee, which has maintained pressure on benchmark indices. Another new global concern that he identified was the recent increase in Japanese bond yields.

A significant increase in yields might cause the yen carry trade to unravel once more, which might hasten outflows from developing nations like India.

“In summary, there is potential for high volatility in the near term.”

Volume selling of small and mid-cap stocks

As investors booked heavy profits on Monday, the small- and mid-cap shares faced heavy selling pressure, which caused several equities to decline. During intraday trading, the Nifty Smallcap100 index fell sharply more than 2% for the fifth consecutive session.

Over the previous five sessions, the index fell sharply by more than 4%. Additionally, the Nifty Midcap 100 index fell by almost 2%. Profit booking causes small and midcap shares down as much as 7%; the biggest losers are Mazgaon Dock, GMR, BDL, and Godrej Properties.

Crude Oil Upswing

Brent Oil Futures expiring in February slipped 1.2% to $63.02 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures dropped 1.2% to $59.37 per barrel, still close to the highest level in more than two weeks.

Volatile crude prices supported by geopolitical uncertainty and expectations of a US interest rate cut tend to pressure India’s import bill and fuel inflation concerns, often prompting cautious sentiment in the securities market.

Declining rupee Vs Dollar

The rupee weakened 16 paise to 90.11 against the US dollar in early trade on Monday, led by high crude oil prices and ongoing foreign fund outflows. The local currency opened at 90.07 before easing further on weak rupees and strong dollar demand from corporates, importers and foreign portfolio investors, forex dealers said.

India The Volatility Index (Vix) rise

As on 08 Dec 2025, the INDIA VIX is trading at ₹10.73, up by 4.00% from the previous close of ₹10.32. The index opened at ₹10.32 touched an intraday high of ₹11.02 and a low of ₹10.14. Over the past 52 weeks, it has moved between a low of ₹9.40 and a high of ₹23.19.

A higher VIX indicates increased market uncertainty, which typically leads traders to reduce risk exposure.

Nifty’s FUT technical outlook

Nifty is anticipated to start the day on a flat note and trade in a range-bound manner.

• Technically speaking, the Nifty has immediate support at 26200. Further declines towards 26100-25980 are anticipated if Nifty closes below that level.

• Conversely, 26420–26500 will function as robust resistance levels.

Bank FUT Nifty Technical outlook

• The Bank Nifty is anticipated to start the day on a flat note and move in a range-bound manner.

• On the downside, Bank Nifty’s next immediate support is around 59700 levels; on a clear closing below, anticipate a decline to 59350–59140.

• At the 60260–60470 levels, there is instant resistance.

 

Disclaimer: This story is for educational awareness purposes only.  Bharatnewsupdates advises readers to consult with certified investment advisor before making any investment decisions.

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Business

Vedanta Group Chairman Anil Agarwal’s Grief Beyond Words: “My Beloved Son Agnivesh Left Us Far Too Soon”

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Today is the darkest day of my life.

My beloved son, Agnivesh, left us far too soon. He was just 49 years old, healthy, full of life, and dreams. Following a skiing accident in the US, he was recovering well in Mount Sinai Hospital, New York. We believed the worst was behind us. But fate had other plans, and a sudden cardiac arrest snatched our son away from us.

No words can describe the pain of a parent who must bid goodbye to his child. A son is not meant to leave before his father. This loss has shattered us in ways we are still trying to comprehend.

I still remember the day Agni was born in Patna on 3 June, 1976. From a middle-class Bihari family, he grew into a man of strength, compassion, and purpose. The light of his mother’s life, a protective brother, a loyal friend, and a gentle soul who touched everyone he met.

Agnivesh was many things – a sportsman, a musician, a leader. He studied at Mayo College, Ajmer, went on to set up one of the finest companies Fujeirah Gold, became Chairman of Hindustan Zinc, and earned the respect of colleagues and friends alike. Yet, beyond all titles and achievements, he remained simple, warm, and deeply human.

Vedanta Group Chairman Anil Agarwal With Son Agnivesh

To me, he was not just my son. He was my friend. My pride. My world.

Kiran and I are broken. And yet, in our grief, we remind ourselves that the thousands of young people who work across Vedanta are also our children.

Agnivesh believed deeply in building a self-reliant India. He would often say, “Papa, we lack nothing as a nation. Why should we ever be behind?”

We shared a dream to ensure that no child sleeps hungry, no child is denied education, every woman stands on her own feet, and every young Indian has meaningful work. I had promised Agni that more than 75% of what we earn would be given back to society.

Today, I renew that promise and resolve to live an even simpler life.

There was so much life ahead of him. So many dreams yet to be lived. His absence leaves a void for his family and friends. We thank all his friends, colleagues and well-wishers for always being there for him.

Beta, you will live on in our hearts, in our work, and in every life you touched.

I do not know how to walk this path without you, but I will try carrying your light forward.

Life gives no warnings. One moment we are planning tomorrow, the next we are learning how to breathe without someone we love. A child’s absence is not something a parent ever overcomes — it is something one learns to carry, quietly, every day.

May we remember how fragile life is, how little control we truly have, and how important it is to love deeply while we can. Those we lose do not disappear; they live on in our memories, our values, and the work we do in their name.

May Agnivesh’s noble soul find peace.
May his light continue through every life he touched.
And may no parent ever have to walk this path alone.

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Business

Remembering Aequitas’ Siddhartha Bhaiya: A Life of Conviction, A Market of Memories!

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Bharatnewsupdates-Siddhartha Bhaiya

There are some losses the markets feel quietly.

Not in index points or fund flows, but in the sudden absence of a voice that made you pause before placing a trade, a mind that reminded you that capital is precious, and a conviction that discipline matters more than applause. The passing of Siddhartha Bhaiya is one such loss.

Bharatnewsupdates : Aequitas Press Release

Press Release Courtesy : Aequitas

At just 47, Siddhartha Bhaiya—Managing Director and founder of Aequitas Investment Management—left the world far too early. A sudden cardiac arrest while on a family vacation in New Zealand took away one of Indian equities’ most thoughtful and independent thinkers. For those who truly followed the markets, this was not merely the loss of a fund manager. It felt like losing a compass.

Dalal Street has seen many successful investors. Very few earn trust. Fewer still earn respect across cycles. Siddhartha Bhaiya belonged to that rare category.

A Chartered Accountant by profession and a market practitioner by instinct, his journey through institutions like Stratcap, Principal PNB, Reliance Capital, and later Nippon India Mutual Fund gave him a deep understanding of how capital market behaves—especially when it misbehaves! But it was in 2012, when he chose to step away and build Aequitas, that his true philosophy found a home.

Aequitas was never built as a factory of equity and brokerage. It was built as a house of profit with patience.

Under Siddhartha’s leadership, the firm grew into a respected PMS and AIF platform managing nearly INR 7,700 crore. The numbers were extraordinary—over 2800 percent absolute returns since inception and a long-term CAGR of around 33%-34%—but he never wore them lightly. For him, returns were an outcome, not a headline.

What truly set him apart was not just his ability to identify small, undiscovered companies that later became multibaggers, but his willingness to do nothing when nothing made sense. In a market addicted to momentum, Siddhartha Bhaiya had the courage to hold cash. When valuations ran ahead of fundamentals, he did not rationalize exuberance—he questioned it.

Over the last couple of years, while the broader market celebrated relentless rallies, Siddhartha Bhaiya stood almost alone in his caution. His funds held unusually high cash levels. He openly spoke about “epic bubble” in Indian equities at a recent concluded Moneycontrol Deserv Wealth Summit in December 2025, stretched valuations, and the risks of blind participation. “Holding cash is the easiest thing to do right now,” he once said—not as an act of fear, but of discipline.

“Before you jump into the markets with your pot of savings. Please spend 2 minutes to read what our team has to say. Take investment decisions carefully and not emotionally. Stock markets are raw brutal and like the animal kingdom, they don’t understand emotions.” Siddhartha Bhaiya wrote on X on June 5, 2024,  after BJP lead NDA got less than the required majority in Lok Sabha to form the government.

Read what he attached with the tweet on X.

This was Siddhartha Bhaiya’s essence: intellectual honesty over popularity.

He blended value with growth, conviction with humility, and contrarian thinking with deep research. He believed markets eventually reward patience, punish excess, and expose emotional decision-making. His frequent reminders to retail investors—to think independently, to observe promoter behaviour, to avoid emotional investing—came not from theory, but from lived experience.

Within Aequitas, he was more than a portfolio manager. He was the intellectual backbone, the cultural anchor. He believed institutions outlive individuals, and he worked quietly to build one that could stand without him. A young team, clear processes, and a long-term world view were central to that vision.

Yet beyond balance sheets and portfolios, those who interacted with him remember something rarer—kindness without pretense. He spoke plainly, never minced words, but was always generous with time and guidance. To many younger market participants, he was a guru who taught not what to buy, but how to think.

There is a cruel irony in his passing. A man deeply conscious about health, often reminding others to take care of their bodies, was taken away suddenly. It serves as a quiet reminder that markets give us cycles, but life gives no such warnings.

Siddhartha Bhaiya once said, “My goal is to always be the best fund manager in the country. Whether I achieve it or not is a different thing.” That sentence reveals everything.

For him, excellence was a pursuit, not a destination.

Today, the screens will continue to blink. Trades will execute. Markets will open and close. But something fundamental has changed. A rare voice of caution, clarity, and integrity has fallen silent. His insights will no longer come through interviews or notes—but they live on in portfolios built with care, in investors taught to respect risk, and in an institution shaped by principles rather than noise.

The markets have lost a brilliant mind. Aequitas has lost its founder. And many of us have lost a guide we didn’t realize we depended on so deeply.

Aum Shanti.

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International News

Russia’s FESCO Ships Vital Supplies to India’s Antarctic Stations in High-Stakes Polar Mission

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Russia’s transport group FESCO has once again taken on one of the toughest routes in global shipping—an Antarctic supply run—by dispatching its diesel-electric vessel Vasily Golovnin to support India’s polar research stations.

The ship is currently sailing toward Antarctica after departing from Cape Town, carrying essential shipment for India’s Bharati and Maitri research stations at Antarctica. The shipment includes fuel, food supplies, and specialized equipment required to sustain scientific exploration through the extreme cold and inhospitable environment.

This voyage is part of a long-standing arrangement between FESCO and India’s National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research (NCPOR), under the Ministry of Earth Sciences. Over the years, the partnership has made FESCO one of the few operators worldwide with consistent experience in servicing Antarctic stations. Along with cargo, the vessel is also transporting Indian scientists who will replace
outgoing station personnel—a routine but critical rotation that keeps year-round research running.

The expedition is expected to continue until April 2026, in line with the narrow navigation window allowed by Antarctic weather and sea ice conditions.

What place this tough mission challenging is not the distance, but the difficulty of the final delivery. India’s Antarctic stations lack traditional port facilities, meaning supplies must be transferred directly from ship to shore under unforeseeable conditions. To execute this, the Vasily Golovnin is adequately equipped with onboard cranes and a self-propelled cargo vessel for coastal unloading.

Two helicopters are also deployed for exploration, personnel transport, and cargo drops when sea access is restricted. Such operations demand precise coordination between maritime and aerial teams, constant weather monitoring, and a crew trained for extreme environments. Even small delays or errors can have serious consequences in Antarctica, where resupply options are virtually non-existent once the season closes. According to Nikolai Chvertkov, Director of FESCO’s Vladivostok branch, the company’s involvement in Antarctic missions dates back several decades. Russian vessels have supported polar expeditions since the 1970s, with international scientific collaborations expanding steadily since the early 2000s.

For the past seven years, the Vasily Golovnin and its crew have been a regular presence in India’s Antarctic logistics chain. Beyond Antarctica, India and Russia are also deepening cooperation in Arctic operations. India has conveyed interest in gaining operational expertise in polar conditions, including icebreaker construction and energy supply logistics in the Russian Arctic—region where Russia holds long-standing prowess.

In polar shipping, success is measured less by fleet size and more by experience. Operating in sub-zero temperatures, landing cargo on undeveloped arctic seaside, protecting human life, and combining sea and air logistics are capabilities that take years to develop. Against this backdrop, FESCO’s continued role in international polar missions highlights how specialized logistics providers remain essential to vital global scientific expedition. Despite changing geopolitical and economic scenario, such operations show that cooperation in extremely harsh environments continues where trust, reliability, and technical skill matter most.

For the broader logistics industry, these missions offer a peek into future demand—particularly for Arctic routes, scientific infrastructure projects, and operations along the Northern Sea Route, where only a handful of players possess the know-how to operate safely and consistently.

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