India Markets Rebound as Sensex Jumps 1.1% and Rupee Hits Two-Week High on US-Iran Deal Optimism
India imports the majority of its crude oil requirements, making the rupee, inflation outlook and broader equity sentiment highly sensitive
Mumbai | EcoPulse24
Indian financial markets rallied sharply on Monday as easing fears over a prolonged Middle East energy shock boosted investor sentiment across equities and currency markets, while hopes for a potential US-Iran agreement helped reduce pressure on oil-import-dependent economies.
India’s BSE Sensex opened about 1.1% higher at 76,252 points, extending gains from the previous session and tracking a broader advance across Asian markets after reports indicated Washington and Tehran had largely negotiated a framework aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz and reducing disruptions to global energy flows.
At the same time, the Indian rupee strengthened to around 95.4 against the US dollar, reaching its strongest level in roughly two weeks as Brent crude prices slipped below $100 per barrel for the first time in more than two weeks.
Oil Relief Supports Indian Assets
The decline in oil prices provided immediate relief to Indian markets given the country’s heavy dependence on imported energy.
India imports the majority of its crude oil requirements, making the rupee, inflation outlook and broader equity sentiment highly sensitive to energy-market volatility and disruptions linked to the Middle East.
Investor sentiment improved significantly after optimism grew around a potential diplomatic breakthrough between the United States and Iran, easing fears that prolonged instability around the Strait of Hormuz could trigger a deeper energy and inflation shock across Asia.
The rupee also received support after Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra said the central bank would do “whatever is required” to maintain orderly currency-market conditions.
Malhotra added that the RBI views the rupee as undervalued and emphasized that India holds nearly $700 billion in foreign-exchange reserves available to manage excessive volatility.
Energy Inflation Risks Still Persist
Despite the stronger rupee and lower oil prices, inflation concerns remain elevated inside the Indian economy.
India’s state-owned fuel retailers raised petrol and diesel prices for the fourth time in May as companies continued attempting to offset losses tied to higher import costs during the Iran conflict period.
The increases highlight how quickly global energy disruptions continue feeding into domestic inflation conditions even as oil prices temporarily retreat from recent highs.
Markets Broadly Advance
Within equities, gains were broad-based across industrial, pharmaceutical, aviation and consumer-linked stocks.
Among the strongest performers:
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HFCL rose 8.8%
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Apollo gained 5.8%
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Eicher Motors climbed 5.3%
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Sun Pharma advanced 5.5%
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and InterGlobe added 2%.
Meanwhile, Hindalco fell 2.1% after reporting an unexpected decline in quarterly profit linked to higher expenses at its US-based Novelis business.
FTSE Index Inclusion Boosts Sentiment
Investor sentiment also received support after FTSE Russell announced that several Indian companies would be added to its FTSE All-World and FTSE All-Cap indexes effective June 22.
The additions include:
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Tata Capital
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Lenskart Solutions
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LG Electronics India
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Meesho
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ICICI Prudential Asset Management
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and Groww.
The inclusion is expected to increase passive investment inflows into Indian equities from global index-tracking funds.
EcoPulse24 Analysis
India’s market rebound highlights how closely Asian economies remain tied to energy-market stability and geopolitical developments surrounding the Middle East.
Few major economies are as sensitive to oil-price shocks as India.
Lower crude prices immediately ease:
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inflation pressures
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trade deficits
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currency weakness
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and imported energy costs.
That sensitivity explains why optimism around a potential Hormuz reopening and US-Iran diplomatic progress quickly translated into gains across both Indian equities and the rupee.
However, the continued increase in domestic fuel prices also shows that the inflationary effects of recent energy disruptions have not fully disappeared from the Indian economy.
The developments also reinforce a broader global pattern:
financial markets are increasingly reacting less to traditional macroeconomic data alone and more directly to geopolitical risks tied to energy routes, shipping security and commodity flows.
For India specifically, the combination of:
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lower oil prices,
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stronger FX reserves,
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resilient equity inflows,
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and improving global risk sentiment
could help stabilize markets in the near term if geopolitical tensions continue easing.
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