Monday, March 2, 2026

Sensex Crashes 2700+ Points Today and later recovered a little: Nifty Below 25K – Why Indian Market Fell on March 2, 2026?

The BSE Sensex opened down 2,743 points (3.37%) at 78,543.73, while NSE Nifty fell 533 points (2.11%) to 24,645. By mid-morning, partial recovery saw Sensex at around 80,093 (down 1.47%) and Nifty at 24,905 (down 1.09%). Investor wealth erosion hit approximately ₹10 lakh crore amid broad-based selling.

Geopolitical Triggers:

Escalating US-Iran hostilities dominated, with Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei killed in a US-Israeli airstrike on Tehran, prompting Iranian missile retaliation against Israel and Arab nations. This fueled fears of broader West Asia war, disrupting oil supply routes and spiking Brent crude initially before a 5.38% drop to $76.79/barrel. Global risk aversion amplified the rout, mirroring Friday's US declines and Monday's Asian drops (Nikkei -1.5%, Hang Seng -1.68%).

Sector Impacts:

Aviation, energy, infrastructure, and realty bore the brunt due to oil volatility and supply chain risks. InterGlobe Aviation (IndiGo), L&T, Adani Ports, Asian Paints, UltraTech Cement, and Reliance Industries led Sensex losers. Banking and IT sectors weakened 2-3%, with Nifty Bank and Nifty IT dragging indices amid FII outflows and US growth concerns. Realty, oil & gas, and autos fell up to 2%; only Bharat Electronics gained.

Institutional Flows:

FIIs sold ₹7,536 crore on Friday, continuing outflows amid global stress, while DIIs bought ₹12,292 crore for support. This FII-DII divergence highlighted risk-off sentiment in emerging markets like India.

Global Context:

US markets closed lower Friday amid Dow futures -690 points, S&P -100, Nasdaq -480 on Monday. Asian peers followed suit, underscoring synchronized global reaction to Middle East oil risks over US Fed dynamics (prior 2025 cuts now secondary).

Expert Analysis:

Geojit’s VK Vijayakumar flagged energy risks from crude surges as primary threats. Enrich Money’s Ponmudi R warned of trade disruptions, supply chain strains, and re-ignited inflation if instability persists. Swastika Investmart noted broad selling beyond sectors, advising long-term focus over panic.

Recovery Dynamics:

Post-pre-open plunge, bargain hunting and DII buying aided rebound, with Nifty holding above 24,900 support. Volatility eyed higher due to Nifty expiry and upcoming Holi holiday (March 3). Key levels: Nifty support 24,500-25,000, resistance 25,500.

Investor Strategies:

Short-term traders face heightened volatility; avoid leverage amid expiry and holiday. Long-term investors should view as correction (not crash), accumulating quality stocks post-stabilization. Monitor crude, FII flows, and West Asia news; diversify beyond cyclicals.

Economic Implications:

Oil spikes threaten India's import bill (80% dependency), inflating CPI and pressuring RBI policy. Prolonged conflict risks GDP drag via higher input costs for aviation/infra, though defense like BEL benefits. SEBI Chairman noted relative Indian stability pre-crash.

Broader Perspectives:

Bull Case: Quick de-escalation, DII strength, and crude cooldown could spark V-shaped recovery; India fundamentals (GDP growth) intact.

Bear Case: Extended war blocks Strait of Hormuz, crude >$100, FII exit accelerates to 22k Nifty.
Neutral View: 2-3% single-day drop routine; historical geopolitics fades without recession. Sectors like IT/banking rebound on US cues



Sunday, March 1, 2026

Relaxo Footwears' Shocking Plunge: ₹1500 ATH to ₹348 in 5 Years – What Happened?

Relaxo Footwears stock hit that crazy ₹1,400 peak back in late 2021? Investors went wild – it was like a 100x ride from listing days. Fast forward to now, March 2026, and it's scraping ₹348-354. That's a brutal 400% drop in five years. Ouch. What the heck went wrong? Let's break it down, buddy-style, for us retail folks eyeing Indian stocks.

The Big Drop Reasons:

Rising raw material costs hit hard first – think rubber, EVA spiking post-pandemic. Then competition exploded. Cheap unorganized players grabbed the low-end market, while biggies like Bata and VKC snatched mid-range with better prices. Weak demand lately too – Q3 FY26 sales dipped 7.5% YoY, profits down 1.5%. Margins squeezed to 13%, consumer wallets tight. Kinda like your favorite chappal shop closing because fakes flooded the street. 

Key Numbers Today:

Stock trades at ₹348, market cap around ₹8,666 Cr. P/E sits high at 52x – pricey compared to footwear peers averaging 30-50x like Bata (53x) or Lehar (19x). No debt, that's a plus – debt-to-equity zero. ROE weak at 8.3%, ROCE 11-12%. Dividend yield? Meager 0.86%, paid ₹3/share lately. Cash flow positive at ₹406 Cr operating last year, but profits grew negative 15% YoY recently. Book value ₹85. 

Began in 1970s when brothers Mukand Lal Dua and Ramesh Kumar Dua took their dad's small footwear gig in Delhi with just ₹10,000. Incorporated 1984, went public later. Ramesh still Chairman, family runs it – sons Nikhil, Gaurav as directors. Grew huge on mass-market rubber slippers, now top non-leather player in India.

Business and Products:

Make cheap, comfy footwear, sell via 500+ distributors to 65,000 rural/urban stores, plus e-com. Brands? Sparx for sports, Flite casuals, Bahamas sandals, Relaxo everyday. No leather, all EVA/PU/rubber for masses. ₹2,800 Cr revenue, mostly India. Exports tiny. Like the reliable chappal guy at your local bazaar, but scaled up big time.

Price Predictions – My Take:

Short-term shaky with demand woes, but zero debt helps. 2026? Maybe ₹450-550 if margins rebound to 15%. By 2030, if sales grow 10% (industry pace), could hit ₹1,200-1,500 – assuming better ROE. 2035? Optimistic ₹2,500+ with e-com boom. 2040? Wild guess ₹4,000-5,000, but only if they fight competition smart. Doubtful without innovation, though – peers like Campus zooming ahead. Watch Q4 results.