Indian equity markets ended in the red on the Sensex Nifty closing bell of June 11, 2026, as renewed US-Iran military exchanges shook investor confidence. Benchmark indices surrendered early gains as foreign institutional investors (FIIs) accelerated selling, information technology heavyweights dragged sharply, and a fresh spike in US inflation reinforced macro headwinds for emerging markets including India.
Closing Bell: NSE & BSE Performance — June 11, 2026
The BSE Sensex closed at 73,832.55, shedding 150.63 points or 0.20% from its previous close. The index swung across a wide 875-point intraday range — hitting a session high of 74,394.34 before sliding to a low of 73,518.75. The NSE Nifty 50 settled at 23,161.60, declining 53.35 points or 0.23%. Broader markets underperformed benchmarks, with midcap and smallcap indices both ending in the red.
| Index | Close | Change (Pts) | Change (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| BSE Sensex | 73,832.55 | ▼ 150.63 | ▼ 0.20% |
| NSE Nifty 50 | 23,161.60 | ▼ 53.35 | ▼ 0.23% |
| Nifty Midcap Select | — | ▼ 184.99 | ▼ 1.08% |
| Nifty Smallcap Select | — | ▼ 16.28 | ▼ 0.27% |
FII & DII Activity
Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) continued their selling streak amid geopolitical anxiety and a hawkish global rate outlook. Provisional data for June 10, 2026 — the latest available — showed FIIs net sold equities worth ₹2,124.98 crore. Domestic institutional investors (DIIs) stepped in as a countervailing force, absorbing ₹3,123.95 crore. DII support has been a consistent cushion against steeper declines, but sustained FII outflows remain a key headwind.
| Category | Activity | Net Flow (₹ Crore) |
|---|---|---|
| FII / FPI | Net Sellers | ▼ 2,124.98 |
| DII | Net Buyers | ▲ 3,123.95 |
Top Gainers & Top Losers
Private banking stocks led the Nifty gainers on June 11. ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, and Axis Bank posted notable advances, drawing buyers seeking earnings-resilient names. Max Healthcare and Bharat Electronics also featured on the positive side. On the flip side, Infosys, HCL Technologies, and Trent led the decliners, weighed by a broad tech-sector selloff and high-beta consumer selling. Hindalco and Wipro rounded out the top losers.
| Top Gainers (Nifty 50) | Top Losers (Nifty 50) |
|---|---|
| ICICI Bank | Infosys |
| Kotak Mahindra Bank | HCL Technologies |
| Axis Bank | Trent |
| Max Healthcare | Hindalco |
| Bharat Electronics | Wipro |
Sector Performance
The Nifty IT index bore the brunt of June 11 selling, tumbling 1.61% to 27,824.95 — the sharpest sectoral decline of the session. Global tech-sector pressure, ongoing concerns about AI disrupting India’s traditional outsourcing model, and foreign fund outflows combined to pressure software exporters. Nifty PSU Bank shed 0.90% while Nifty FMCG eased marginally. Nifty Private Bank and Nifty Pharma outperformed, reflecting selective buying in defensives and financials.
| Sector | Performance |
|---|---|
| Nifty IT | ▼ 1.61% |
| Nifty PSU Bank | ▼ 0.90% |
| Nifty FMCG | ▼ 0.24% |
| Nifty Private Bank | Outperformed |
| Nifty Pharma | Outperformed |
Commodity Watch
MCX Gold traded at ₹1,47,669 per 10 grams at midday, slipping 0.24% as a strong US dollar and elevated Treasury yields kept precious metals on the defensive. MCX Silver fell 0.55% to ₹2,34,216 per kilogram. MCX Crude Oil dipped 0.30% to ₹8,700 per barrel despite Iran formally declaring the Strait of Hormuz closed to all vessels — a development that could sharply spike energy prices if the closure is enforced beyond a brief standoff.
| Commodity | Price (MCX) | Change (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Gold | ₹1,47,669 / 10g | ▼ 0.24% |
| Silver | ₹2,34,216 / kg | ▼ 0.55% |
| Crude Oil | ₹8,700 / bbl | ▼ 0.30% |
Currency Watch
The Indian rupee came under renewed pressure on June 11, with the USD/INR pair trading in the ₹95.70–₹95.80 range. Heavy FII outflows, a strengthening US dollar, and elevated global bond yields put the rupee on the back foot. A persistently weak rupee raises imported inflation risks, particularly for crude oil and essential commodities, and may complicate the RBI’s monetary policy stance in the sessions ahead.
| Currency Pair | Rate (₹) | Outlook |
|---|---|---|
| USD / INR | 95.70 – 95.80 | Rupee under pressure |
Global Market Cues
US equity markets closed sharply lower on Wednesday, June 10. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.87%, the S&P 500 lost 1.62%, and the Nasdaq Composite slid 1.98%. Eight of eleven S&P 500 sectors finished in negative territory, led by industrials, materials, and technology. Fresh US overnight airstrikes on Iranian military targets — and Iran’s IRGC retaliation followed by a formal Strait of Hormuz closure declaration — triggered the selloff as energy and inflation fears resurfaced globally.
| Global Index | Session | Change (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Dow Jones Industrial Average | Jun 10 Close | ▼ 1.87% |
| S&P 500 | Jun 10 Close | ▼ 1.62% |
| Nasdaq Composite | Jun 10 Close | ▼ 1.98% |
| GIFT Nifty (Pre-open Jun 11) | Pre-market | ▼ 0.32% |
Conclusion
Indian equity markets continue to navigate a challenging terrain defined by US-Iran conflict escalation, persistent FII outflows, IT sector headwinds, and a weakening rupee. DII support remains a stabilising factor, but a durable market recovery will require meaningful de-escalation in West Asia and crude oil stabilisation. In the near term, traders should watch Nifty’s 23,000 support zone, RBI commentary on the currency, and any diplomatic breakthroughs on the Hormuz standoff as the primary triggers.
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