Mumbai, May 6, 2026, 19:46 IST
Indian equities snapped higher on Wednesday, logging their sharpest advance in almost three weeks. The Sensex added 940.73 points by the close, while the Nifty crossed the 24,300 mark, both benchmarks lifted as tumbling oil prices offered relief to a crude-import-heavy economy. Final tallies: BSE Sensex up 1.22% at 77,958.52, NSE Nifty 50 climbing 1.24% to 24,330.95.
This shift is significant: crude prices have carried the bulk of macro risk for India throughout the U.S.-Iran standoff. Brent crude—the global yardstick—dropped sharply, with Washington and Tehran reportedly pursuing a memorandum that could outline steps for nuclear negotiations and a potential path out of the conflict.
Late in the day, traders were already positioning for a firmer open in the next session. At 4:40 p.m., GIFT Nifty, which serves as an offshore preview for the Nifty’s direction, stood at 24,644. Brent hovered at $97 a barrel, according to Moneycontrol.
Banks were out in front, pushing the rally higher. According to Reuters, 14 out of 16 major sectors notched gains. Bank shares climbed 2.6%, state-owned lenders did even better at 2.8%, while private banks rose 2.4%. Small-cap and mid-cap stocks weren’t left out, adding 1.9% and 1.8%.
“The trigger was largely global,” said Hariprasad K, research analyst and founder of Livelong Wealth, in comments to the Times of India. He flagged optimism tied to a potential U.S.-Iran peace agreement and the boost India gets from cheaper crude. InterGlobe Aviation led Sensex, jumping 6.65%. Trent, Asian Paints, State Bank of India, and HDFC Bank also posted strong gains. The Times of India
HDFC Bank jumped 3.1% after a Reuters report said law firms examining governance at India’s biggest private lender are expected to find no serious issues—potentially paving the way for Chief Executive Sashidhar Jagdishan’s reappointment. The same report pointed out that since HDFC Bank merged with parent HDFC Ltd in 2023, shares of ICICI Bank have climbed 33%, while HDFC Bank shares have shed 5%.
The government just put another piece on the board. India’s cabinet on Tuesday signed off on an emergency credit guarantee program totaling 181 billion rupees—roughly $1.9 billion—for companies hit by short-term liquidity crunches linked to Middle East turmoil. The scheme bumps up the guarantee for smaller businesses.
The rupee snapped higher, climbing 0.7% to 94.61 per dollar—its strongest single-day move in a month—after plumbing a record low of 95.4325 on Tuesday. Other oil-linked Asian currencies headed north as well: the Indonesian rupiah and Philippine peso posted gains, and the Korean won surged more than 2%, Reuters reported.
Technicals looked clearer for the day. Nilesh Jain, VP-head of technical and derivative research at Centrum Finverse, flagged Nifty’s move above 24,300 resistance—a “positive shift” in the near-term setup, he said. Eyes now drift to 24,500 as the next spot. Moneycontrol
Still, the bounce hinges on negotiations that remain unresolved. U.S. officials are waiting for Iran to weigh in on crucial issues within the next 48 hours. Reuters noted it couldn’t confirm the Axios story about a draft memorandum, and Iran maintains any peace agreement must meet its definition of fairness.
Not everyone jumped into the rally. On May 6, foreign institutional investors offloaded Indian equities worth 58.35 billion rupees, according to Moneycontrol. Domestic funds stepped in, picking up 68.37 billion rupees of shares. “High volatility” and steady foreign outflows still top the watchlist, said Vikram Kasat, head advisory at PL Capital. Moneycontrol