Top Losers Today 10-Jul-2026: Stocks Under Pressure
Introduction
Nifty 50 closed at 23,882.05 (-2.12%) while the BSE Sensex fell to 76,503.60 (-2.15%) as rising crude oil prices intensified inflation and supply risk concerns. Market breadth was sharply negative, with 698 advances versus 2,631 declines (82 unchanged) among 3,411 traded stocks. Selling was broad-based across sectors as traders cut risk ahead of the Fed’s June meeting minutes and the start of the Q1 earnings season.
Large Cap Top Losers
Trent Ltd (-12.52%) Trent slid as investors aggressively reduced exposure to high-valuation discretionary retail names during the session-wide risk-off selloff triggered by a spike in crude oil prices. The move coincided with broader concerns that higher energy costs can lift inflation and pressure urban consumption demand. Trading volumes were elevated at 11.43 lakh shares, indicating strong distribution rather than a routine dip.
Varun Beverages Ltd (-6.32%) Varun Beverages fell as the market repriced consumption and FMCG-adjacent stocks for potential margin pressure from higher input and logistics costs tied to rising oil prices. The stock saw heavy churn at 1.03 crore shares, consistent with a de-risking day where investors preferred to cut beta ahead of near-term macro and earnings catalysts.
ICICI Prudential Asset Management Co Ltd (-5.97%) ICICI Prudential AMC declined as a sharp benchmark correction typically raises near-term concerns on equity AUM levels and fee growth for asset managers. The fall tracked the broader market drawdown, where lower indices can translate into mark-to-market AUM pressure and softer incremental inflows.
Union Bank of India (-5.68%) Union Bank dropped as PSU banks faced selling amid a broad market risk unwind, with investors wary that an oil-led inflation shock can keep rates tighter and raise funding cost uncertainty. The stock’s 2.61 crore share volume underscored that the move was driven by high participation rather than thin trading.
Power Finance Corporation Ltd (-5.53%) PFC fell as rate and liquidity sensitivity returned to focus during the selloff, with higher crude prices raising the probability of prolonged inflation and tighter financial conditions. The decline also reflected profit-taking in actively traded PSU finance counters, with 35.63 lakh shares changing hands.
Mid Cap Top Losers
Page Industries Ltd (-7.88%) Page Industries declined as investors rotated away from premium consumption plays in a session dominated by macro risk, with crude-led inflation fears threatening discretionary spending. The stock’s sharp fall on modest volume (47.92 thousand shares) also pointed to limited buy-side support near key price levels.
Dr Reddys Laboratories Ltd (-7.48%) Dr Reddy’s sank on unusually heavy traded volume of 85.06 lakh shares, suggesting large sell orders as the broader market moved into risk-reduction mode ahead of key global and domestic triggers. In the absence of a stock-specific headline in the provided feed, the day’s action was consistent with a technical breakdown driven by high participation.
Bank of Maharashtra (-7.35%) Bank of Maharashtra fell as PSU banking names saw outsized selling during the benchmark slide, with investors reassessing rate and asset-quality variables under an inflationary oil scenario. The stock recorded very high turnover at 7.22 crore shares, reinforcing that the drop was driven by broad positioning cuts.
Cochin Shipyard Ltd (-6.66%) Cochin Shipyard dropped as high-beta defence and shipbuilding counters were sold in the market-wide deleveraging, after recent volatility in the broader tape. The 13.12 lakh share volume indicated sustained selling through the day, not an isolated downtick.
Suzlon Energy Ltd (-6.50%) Suzlon declined as risk appetite weakened for leveraged, momentum-driven renewable plays during the sharp index fall. With 4.44 crore shares traded, the move reflected a high-conviction exit by traders as the stock remained well below its 52-week high of Rs 68.30.
Small Cap Top Losers
Mangalam Worldwide Ltd (-89.97%) Mangalam Worldwide crashed largely due to a corporate action adjustment as the stock turned ex-split on 10/07/2026 (new face value Rs 1), which mechanically resets the traded price lower. Investors typically see a sharp percentage drop on the ex-date even when underlying value is unchanged, and the counter still saw heavy activity at 76.71 lakh shares.
National Standard (India) Ltd (-55.67%) National Standard plunged to its 52-week low of Rs 538.55, extending a steep downtrend and triggering further selling as key supports gave way. The provided context also flagged a sharp profitability decline, with net profit reported to have fallen 67.78% year-on-year to Rs 1.16 crore in Q4 FY26, which can worsen investor confidence in earnings visibility.
Allcargo Global Ltd (-28.03%) Allcargo Global fell to its 52-week low of Rs 15.46, with the price action indicating a breakdown that drew follow-on selling. The drop came with 16.44 lakh shares traded, pointing to broad participation as logistics-related names can also face scrutiny when crude oil spikes raise operating cost assumptions.
City Pulse Multiventures Ltd (-22.61%) City Pulse Multiventures slid to a fresh 52-week low of Rs 923.95, as persistent weakness and thin liquidity offered little support on a risk-off day. With only 100 shares traded, the sharp percentage move also reflects how low volumes can amplify price swings in small-cap counters.
Omega Interactive Technologies Ltd (-22.58%) Omega Interactive Technologies fell sharply amid continued volatility in microcap IT names, with limited liquidity (4.85 thousand shares) exacerbating the decline. The stock remains far below its 52-week high of Rs 112.06, and the day’s move fit a broader pattern of selloffs in thinly traded counters during market-wide stress.
Market Overview
Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East pushed oil prices higher after the US President said the ceasefire with Iran was “over” following fresh developments around the Strait of Hormuz, reviving worries over supply disruptions. That macro shock pulled Indian equities lower, with the Sensex closing at 76,503.60 (-2.15%) and Nifty 50 ending at 23,882.05 (-2.12%), marking the biggest daily decline since late March.
All major sectoral indices ended lower in the risk-off move, with heavyweight laggards cited in the session such as InterGlobe Aviation, Maruti, Hindustan Unilever, Bajaj Finance and Kotak Mahindra Bank. Investors also stayed cautious ahead of the Fed’s June meeting minutes and the start of the earnings season, with key results due in the immediate sessions.
Breadth was decisively bearish: 2,631 stocks declined versus 698 advances (82 unchanged) on the NSE, highlighting that the selloff was not limited to a handful of index constituents.
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