Coronavirus Pushes India Equities Toward Worst Quarterly Drop

Sensex is set for a quarterly drop of about 30%, surpassing the previous record of 28% fall in the quarter through June 1992.

(Bloomberg) -- India’s benchmark equity index dropped on Monday, set to mark its worst quarter ever, on concern that government efforts to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus and its economic fallout may not be enough.

The S&P BSE Sensex Index slumped 4.6% to 28,440.32 at the close in Mumbai after adding more than 10% in the previous three sessions. The gauge is set for a quarterly drop of more than 30%, surpassing the previous record of a 28% decline in the quarter through June 1992. That slide followed India’s steps to cede control over the economy, open up for foreign investment, cut tariffs and de its currency, to pull the nation from an unprecedented balance of payments crisis.

Cases of Covid-19 in the world’s second-most populous country have ticked rapidly higher in the past week, raising the alarm over the ability of India, with a fragile health-care system and battered economy, to handle a virus crisis of the magnitude of China or Italy’s. India’s policy makers announced a $22.6 billion spending plan and an emergency interest rate cut to shield the economy from a nationwide lockdown imposed to contain the spread of the deadly pathogen that is devastating lives and businesses across the world.

The “measures are not sufficient to prop up plummeting growth, or to stimulate demand when the lockdown ends,” Teresa John, an economist at Nirmal Bang Equities Pvt. wrote in a note on Friday. “The announcements mainly involve reallocation and front-loading of expenditure.”

While India has seen 27 deaths and just over 1,000 cases, experts fear the real tally could be much higher.

READ: Pessimistic Indian Doctors Brace for Tsunami of Virus Cases

India’s rupee weakened against the U.S. dollar, while its sovereign bonds fell amid thin trading on Monday. The NSE Nifty 50 Index declined 4.4%.

The Numbers

Seventeen of 19 sector sub-indexes compiled by BSE Ltd. dropped, led by gauges of real estate and financial companies.

Twenty-four of the 30 Sensex members declined. Bajaj Finance Ltd. and Tata Steel Ltd. were among the top losers. Consumer staples stocks Nestle India Ltd. and Hindustan Unilever Ltd. were among the top gainers.

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