Why market crashed: It's not just coronavirus, there's more to it

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
falls in history tracking their global peers and spooked by a rapid spread of coronavirus across the world. At 9.50 am, the BSE Sensex was
trading 1,145.29 points or 2.88 per cent lower at 38,600
NSE barometer Nifty fell 347.90 points or 2.99 per cent to 11,285.40
The BSE m-cap fell Rs 3.77 lakh crore to Rs 148 lakh crore
India VIX, the barometer of fear in the markets, spiked nearly 20 per cent to top 21-mark
Here are few factors dragging the indices: Coronavirus reaches six continentsCoronavirus that reached shores of all six habitable
continents in the world was the biggest factor spooking investors on Dalal Street
Even though China has seen a fall in the number of new cases, other countries are seeing a rapid growth in infections as well as deaths. A
Reuters tally showed that about 10 countries reported their first virus cases in the past 24 hours, including Nigeria, the most populous
country in Africa and the first case in sub-Saharan Africa. Number of cases in South Korea crossed above 2,000
On the other hand, the death toll in Iran from coronavirus had risen to 26, by far the highest number outside China. US indices see record
fallCrash in the US markets overnight also dampened the sentiments on the Street
The S-P 500 finished 12 per cent below its February 19 record close, marking its fastest correction ever in just six trading days. The Dow,
down 1,190 points, registered a record one-day points drop, which was also its fourth 1,000-point decline in history and the second this
week. Asian markets also mimicked their western peers
Japan's Nikkei slumped 4 per cent
MSCI all country world index fell 0.5 per cent after 3.3 per cent drop on Thursday
So far this week, it has lost 9.3 per cent, on course for its biggest weekly decline since a 9.8 per cent plunge in November 2008. GDP
growth likely to flatlineSome cautiousness also crept in among market participants after economists said that gross domestic product (GDP)
growth rate is likely to be flat in the third quarter
The government will release GDP data later in the day. State Bank of India said the growth will likely stay flat at 4.5 per cent in the
October-December 2019
It also said that India faces the risk of getting impacted by the coronavirus epidemic economically because of its high reliance on Chinese
imports for various goods. ICICI Bank in a report said that GDP growth is expected to print around 4.7 per cent year-on-year. FPIs offload
Rs 10,000 crore in four daysForeign portfolio investors offloaded shares worth Rs 3,127.36 crore on Thursday, taking their total sales to
nearly Rs 10,000 crore in the past four days
Money managers believe that domestic stocks will continue to see outflows if the global market rout does not end, even though the country
has been relatively unaffected by the outbreak. Technical outlook weakFearful headlines continued to make life difficult for the bulls and
Although analysts expected that level to provide some support, they also warned the index could slide if it fails to hold the level
Ratio of Bank Nifty versus Nifty is hovering near important resistance of 2.60-2.61; hence, follow-up action in the Bank Nifty needs to be