Indian benchmark indices opened lower on July 13, 2026, as news of Iranian strikes unsettled global sentiment overnight. The Sensex and Nifty both slipped at the open, pulled down by broad-based selling pressure even as most Asian markets also traded in the red.
The immediate trigger was geopolitical: reports of Iran launching strikes rattled investor confidence in risk assets globally. When cross-border military action enters the picture, markets tend to reprice quickly. Oil prices typically spike on Middle East tensions, which raises input costs for energy-importing economies like India. Higher crude also pressures the Indian rupee, widens the current account deficit, and squeezes corporate margins in sectors from logistics to chemicals.
IT Stocks Hold Firm
Against the broadly weak open, information technology stocks stood out as the session's clear outperformers. This pattern is not unusual during geopolitical shocks. IT companies earn a large share of their revenue in US dollars, so a weaker rupee directly boosts their reported earnings in Indian rupee terms. Investors often rotate into IT during periods of domestic or global stress precisely because that dollar-revenue hedge insulates the sector from the worst of the turbulence.
The sector's relative strength also reflects the fact that IT demand from the United States and Europe does not fall immediately in response to Middle East events, unlike, say, aviation fuel costs or commodity prices, which reprice within hours.
What to Watch
The key variable from here is how far the Iranian strikes escalate and whether oil markets sustain a meaningful spike. A sharp and lasting rise in crude prices would put the Reserve Bank of India in a difficult spot: higher import costs push inflation up, limiting room to cut interest rates even if growth slows. That scenario would be negative for rate-sensitive sectors including banking, real estate, and consumer durables.
For equity markets, the near-term direction depends on whether this geopolitical shock is treated as a one-day event or the start of a sustained escalation. If tensions ease quickly, the opening decline could reverse. If escalation continues, the pressure on the broader market is likely to deepen, with defensives like IT, pharma, and FMCG attracting more buying relative to cyclicals.
Investors tracking Indian markets should watch the rupee against the dollar, Brent crude spot prices, and any further diplomatic or military developments out of the Middle East. These three signals will set the tone for how the session and the week ahead develop.