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In July 2008, for instance, crude surged 27% in just two months to a record $147.5 a barrel during the Global Financial Crisis, dragging Nifty down 25%. Two months later, crude had eased 17%, and Nifty rebounded 12%.
A similar pattern emerged in October 2018. As crude rose 18% over two months on strong demand and geopolitical risks, Nifty slipped more than 4%. But over the next two months, the index stabilised while Brent prices collapsed nearly 39%.
Agenciesbut Crude’s impact extends beyond equities
The trend repeated in March 2022 when Russia-Ukraine conflict pushed Brent up 58% in two months and Nifty dropped 11%. Within the following two months, oil prices fell 20% and Nifty regained all lost ground, rising 11%.
Over a 25-year period, Nifty and Brent show a moderately positive correlation of 0.3. A periodic analysis, however, reveals that this relationship has shifted meaningfully over time. The coefficient has declined to around 0.38 since 2020 from 0.87 between 2000 and 2010, indicating a weakening linkage in recent years.
Crude’s impact extends beyond equities as higher prices affect input costs thereby affecting the broader economy. The Consumer Price Index shares a strong correlation of 0.64 with Brent, underscoring the effect of energy prices on inflation.
With Brent crude up 72% so far in 2026, the rise is set to increase energy and feedstock costs, potentially squeezing corporate margins and widening the fiscal deficit.
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https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/stocks/news/crude-surge-triggers-9-fall-in-nifty-50-in-2026-past-trends-suggest-relief-once-oil-cools/articleshow/129363531.cms




