Indian Stock Market: March 30 – April 3, 2026
A volatile holiday-shortened week — 3 trading days, 2 holidays, 1 dramatic swing from crash to recovery amid Iran war fears and crude oil shocks.
📊 Benchmark Scorecard
Week closing vs previous Friday (March 28) close
📅 Day-by-Day Breakdown
📈 Sectoral Heatmap
How different sectors performed this week
| Sector | Weekly Change | Trend | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nifty IT | +2.6% | 💚 Best Performer | Q4 earnings optimism, rupee depreciation benefits |
| Nifty Metal | +1.0% | 💚 Mild Gain | Global commodity price support |
| Nifty Pharma | +0.5% | 💚 Defensive | Safe-haven buying in volatile market |
| Nifty Bank | −2.1% | 🔴 Under Pressure | FII selling, rate-sensitive concerns |
| Nifty Auto | −2.8% | 🔴 Weak | Crude oil spike raises input cost fears |
| Nifty Realty | −3.5% | 🔴 Worst Hit | Rising interest rate concerns, FII exit |
🏆 Top Gainers & Losers (Nifty 50)
▲ Top Gainers
| Stock | Change |
|---|---|
| HCLTech | +3.5% |
| Tech Mahindra | +3.2% |
| TCS | +2.8% |
| Trent | +2.4% |
| Infosys | +1.8% |
▼ Top Losers
| Stock | Change |
|---|---|
| HDFC Life | −7.6% |
| Shriram Finance | −6.7% |
| Dr. Reddy’s | −6.4% |
| Bajaj Finance | −6.3% |
| Bajaj Finserv | −6.0% |
💸 FII vs DII: The Money Battle
🌎 Macro Dashboard
Key indicators that moved markets this week
📰 Key Stories That Moved Markets
Trump renewed threats to strike Iran, causing global markets to sell off. Later softened stance saying strikes could end in 2–3 weeks, triggering a relief rally.
Brent crude breached $110/barrel mid-week on supply fears. India imports 85%+ of its oil — every $10 increase adds ~0.4% to inflation and widens the current account deficit.
Foreign investors pulled a record $12 billion from Indian equities in FY2025-26. March alone saw ₹1 lakh crore in outflows — the worst monthly outflow in Indian market history.
Nifty IT gained 2.6% for the week. HCLTech, Tech Mahindra, TCS, and Infosys all posted gains as investors positioned ahead of Q4 earnings season starting next week.
National Stock Exchange moved closer to its mega IPO (est. ₹20,000 crore). Shareholders must express interest by April 27. NSE appointed a record 20 merchant bankers.
📋 FY26 Report Card (April 2025 – March 2026)
The financial year that just ended — a tough one for investors
🔍 The Week in One Line
A holiday-shortened week of extremes — from Black Monday’s 1,636-point crash to April 1’s 2,000-point intraday recovery — all driven by one man’s tweets about Iran, proving once again that geopolitics can override fundamentals overnight.
Week Ahead Watch: Q4 earnings season kicks off (TCS reports first), RBI policy expectations, crude oil trajectory, and Trump’s next Iran move.
🔮 Week Ahead: April 7–11, 2026 — What Could Happen?
This is an educational outlook based on current market signals — not investment advice. Markets can move in either direction.
🟢 Bull Case (Market Goes Up)
- Iran ceasefire talks progress — a 45-day pause is being discussed; any breakthrough sends crude below $100 and market surges
- RBI holds rates on April 8 at 5.25% with dovish tone — signals future cuts, positive for banks and rate-sensitive sectors
- TCS Q4 results beat estimates on April 9 — strong deal wins and final dividend trigger IT rally
- Short covering after 6 weeks of decline — oversold Nifty bounces from 22,450 support
- DIIs continue buying — domestic flows absorb FII selling pressure
Nifty target: 23,000–23,350
🔴 Bear Case (Market Goes Down)
- Trump escalates Iran threats — his Tuesday deadline to open Strait of Hormuz could trigger military action, oil spikes past $115
- Crude oil sustains above $110 — raises India’s import bill, pressures rupee beyond ₹94, inflation spikes
- RBI turns hawkish — signals rate hike possibility due to oil-driven inflation fears
- TCS disappoints or gives weak guidance — AI disruption narrative accelerates IT sell-off
- FIIs continue heavy selling — global risk-off drags emerging markets including India
Nifty risk zone: 22,000–21,800
📅 Key Events Calendar — April 7–11
| Date | Event | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Mon, Apr 7 | Market reopens after 3-day break | Gap-up or gap-down likely based on global cues over the long weekend |
| Tue, Apr 8 | RBI MPC Policy Decision | Repo rate expected at 5.25% (hold). Tone matters — dovish = bullish, hawkish = bearish |
| Tue, Apr 8 | Trump’s Hormuz deadline | He threatened to destroy Iran’s infrastructure if Strait isn’t opened. Major risk event |
| Thu, Apr 9 | TCS Q4 Results + Dividend | IT bellwether kicks off earnings season. Sets tone for entire IT sector |
| All week | FII/DII flow data | Watch if FII selling intensity reduces — first sign of stabilisation |
| All week | Crude oil trajectory | Below $105 = bullish, above $112 = very bearish for Indian markets |
This is a week where events matter more than charts. RBI policy (April 8) and TCS results (April 9) are scheduled catalysts, but the wildcard is the Iran situation — one tweet from Trump can swing Nifty 500 points in either direction. If you’re a long-term investor, this volatility is noise; keep your SIPs running. If you’re a short-term trader, keep strict stop-losses and position sizes small. The 22,450–23,000 range on Nifty is the battlefield — a decisive break in either direction will set the trend for April.
Disclaimer: This outlook is purely educational and not investment advice. Stock markets are inherently unpredictable. Always do your own research or consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor before making investment decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did the Indian stock market crash on March 30, 2026?
The crash was triggered by US President Trump renewing threats to strike Iran, which sent Brent crude above $110/barrel. India imports over 85% of its oil, so any spike in crude prices directly hurts corporate margins, increases inflation, and weakens the rupee. Combined with aggressive FII selling of ₹6,267 crore, the Sensex fell 1,636 points (−2.22%) and Nifty dropped 488 points.
What caused the market rally on April 1, 2026?
Trump softened his stance and indicated that US military strikes on Iran could wind down within 2–3 weeks without requiring Iran to sign a deal first. This de-escalation signal triggered a massive relief rally. Sensex soared 2,017 points intraday (touching 73,965) before settling 1,187 points higher. Oil prices also cooled slightly, adding to the positive sentiment.
Should I stop my SIPs because of the market crash?
No. SIPs are designed for exactly these conditions. When markets fall, your SIP buys more units at lower prices (rupee cost averaging). DIIs, which include mutual funds, bought ₹12,173 crore this week while FIIs sold ₹16,198 crore. Your SIP money is part of this stabilising force. Historically, investors who continued SIPs through corrections earned significantly better long-term returns than those who stopped.
How does crude oil price affect the Indian stock market?
India is the world’s third-largest oil importer, buying over 85% of its crude from overseas. Every $10/barrel increase in crude oil adds approximately 0.4% to India’s inflation rate, widens the current account deficit, and weakens the rupee. This hurts corporate margins (especially in auto, aviation, and paint sectors) and can force RBI to hold or raise interest rates, which is negative for equities.
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About the Author
Mithun Srivastava is an investor, author of 11 books, and stock market educator with over 10 years of experience in the Indian financial markets. This weekly market wrap is part of his initiative to provide clear, data-driven market insights to Indian investors for free. Follow his work at mithunsrivastava.com.

