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Indian shares drop on higher oil prices and weak Infosys predictions

Indian shares fell on Friday as they headed for a third straight session of losses, pressured by rising oil prices due to Middle East tensions and a fall in IT stocks after Infosys released a weak revenue forecast.

As of 9:37 a.m. IST, the Nifty 50 index fell 0.66% and the BSE Sensex dropped 0.76%.

This week they are down by 1.4% and 1.8%, on track to end a winning streak of two weeks.

On the day, all 16 major?sectors fell. Small-caps and midcaps both fell by about 0.5%.

IT index fell 2.3% due to a drop of 3% in Infosys.

The No. 2 IT company in the country?forecast annual revenue growth below market expectations due to macroeconomic uncertainty and tepid client spending. The country's No. The outlook was more important than the better-than expected?fourth quarter results. Jefferies said that "growth concerns will continue to weight on the stock" and added that Infosys's?FY2027 guidance for growth was "disappointing due to multiple growth headwinds." Brent crude hovered at $106 following a video of Iran's commandos storming an cargo ship after the Strait of Hormuz was seized by Iran. This came in response to the failure of peace talks and the extension of the ceasefire announced by U.S. president Donald Trump. Bajaj Broking Research said that "persistent uncertainty due to the escalating U.S. - Iran tensions and the sharp rise in crude price is keeping sentiments fragile."

The brokerage stated that "additionally, the rupee's weakening at the 94-mark and continued foreign outflows from domestic stocks are contributing to the overall market gyrations."

LTM, among other stocks, fell 3.4%, despite a marginal revenue increase in the fourth quarter. Multiple brokerages claimed that a weak outlook for growth would lead to a devaluation of valuations.

Cyient's quarterly profits missed expectations due to a?one-time fee and higher costs.

Inventurus Knowledge Solutions, which bucks the 'trend,' jumped 9% after announcing a cross-border deal, signing a contract to purchase U.S. based healthcare IT company TruBridge, for up to $565,000,000.

(source: Reuters)