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Global Stock Markets Fall as US-Iran Tensions Rise; Chip Stocks Plummet and Oil Prices Surge

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Global stock markets plunged into deep red territory as escalating geopolitical conflicts between the United States and Iran sent shockwaves through international financial corridors. The growing threat of full-scale disruptions along the vital Strait of Hormuz has forced institutional investors to retreat from high-risk assets, seeking refuge in safe havens. This massive market correction was primarily led by a steep selloff in global semiconductor and tech stocks, coupled with a sharp spike in crude oil prices, which have jumped over 4% to 5% to hover near critical benchmarks.

The immediate trigger for the widespread panic was a fresh exchange of military strikes between US forces and Iran in the Middle East. With both nations claiming tactical control over the Strait of Hormuz—a narrow choke point responsible for the transit of nearly one-fifth of the world’s petroleum consumption—maritime shippers and oil tankers are avoiding the route. This logistical blockade has raised serious concerns about global energy supply chains, sparking a sudden surge in Brent crude prices toward $80 per barrel.

Asian Chipmakers Hammered Amid AI Valuation Concerns

The geopolitical uncertainty collided heavily with an ongoing correction in high-flying technology sectors, particularly the semiconductor giants that powered the recent artificial intelligence (AI) boom. In Asia, tech-heavy indices bore the brunt of the damage. South Korea’s Kospi index led the regional declines with a staggering 8.95% crash, triggering temporary circuit breakers to halt active trading.

Leading memory chipmakers witnessed aggressive liquidations. South Korea’s SK Hynix plunged by 15.4% in Seoul, while electronics behemoth Samsung Electronics plummeted by 10.7%. In Japan, semiconductor pioneer Kioxia closed 12.9% lower, dragooning Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 index into a steep decline. Analysts noted that while artificial intelligence continues to drive real infrastructure demand, fears that stock valuations have run too high too fast made these high-beta tech stocks highly vulnerable to geopolitical shocks.

Wall Street and European Markets Face Intense Pressure

The panic in Asia quickly reverberated across Western trading floors. In the United States, stock futures tracking the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 plummeted by 1.3%, while the broader S&P 500 futures fell by 0.5% ahead of the opening bell. Giant market-cap tech stocks, including market leader Nvidia, experienced notable pre-market losses as institutional desks trimmed exposure to risk.

In Europe, major indices traded with mixed to downward biases as investors attempted to digest the potential impact of sustained higher energy costs on inflation. With the Federal Reserve monitoring macroeconomic stability, a prolonged energy shock threatens to delay highly anticipated interest rate cuts, keeping borrowing costs elevated for global businesses.

Indian Indices Rebound from Intraday Lows to End Flat

Bucking the catastrophic regional trend, the Indian equity benchmarks showcased immense resilience. The 30-share BSE Sensex plunged over 711 points during early morning trade to touch a low of 76,857.43. However, a strong wave of domestic institutional buying and value hunting in defensive sectors helped the index recover all lost ground, ending marginally higher by 47 points at 77,616.40.

Similarly, the broader NSE Nifty clawed back from its intraday lows to close virtually flat, up 4.10 points at 24,211. The recovery was heavily anchored by India’s IT majors, with Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) surging 5.43% and HCL Technologies climbing over 5%. While heavy weight metals, auto, and public sector enterprise stocks ended as laggards, the robust performance of consumer durables and software exporters protected Indian retail investors from the global bloodbath.

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