A sharp surge in crude oil prices amid escalating tensions in West Asia triggered an unusual market move on March 23, with equities, gold and silver declining simultaneously. The rare alignment reflects deepening global uncertainty, rising inflation risks and shifting expectations around US monetary policy.
While benchmark indices such as the Sensex and Nifty 50 fell over 2 percent, precious metals also came under heavy selling pressure, dropping more than 10 percent in early trade.
Escalation in the US–Iran conflict has pushed crude oil above $110 per barrel
Inflation fears have resurfaced globally
Hopes of a US Federal Reserve rate cut have weakened
The US dollar has strengthened sharply
Risk aversion has triggered selling across asset classes
The biggest trigger has been the spike in crude oil prices following fears of supply disruption through the Strait of Hormuz.
Higher oil prices raise input costs for companies
Margins are expected to come under pressure
Growth outlook weakens for oil-importing economies like India
This has led to a broad selloff in equities, as investors factor in weaker earnings prospects.
Rising crude prices have reignited inflation concerns globally.
Higher inflation reduces real returns on financial assets
Central banks may delay rate cuts or stay hawkish
Liquidity conditions could tighten further
For equities, this translates into lower valuations and earnings risks.
Unlike typical safe-haven behaviour, gold and silver declined sharply.
A stronger US dollar makes precious metals costlier for global buyers
Rising US bond yields reduce the appeal of non-yielding assets like gold
Expectations of prolonged higher interest rates trigger profit booking
As a result, both gold and silver saw steep corrections despite geopolitical tensions.
The Indian rupee weakened--94 against the US dollar, reflecting sustained external pressures.
Currency depreciation increases imported inflation
It accelerates foreign capital outflows
Adds to overall macroeconomic stress
The current market phase is being driven by a single dominant factor — the oil-led inflation shock.
Equities are falling on growth and earnings concerns
Gold and silver are falling due to a strong dollar and higher yields
Global markets are reacting to tightening financial conditions
Markets are expected to remain volatile in the near term, with crude oil prices, currency movements and geopolitical developments dictating direction.
Unless tensions ease and oil prices stabilise, the unusual trend of multiple asset classes moving in the same direction could persist.