22/05/2026
India falling out of the world’s top‑100 companies list isn’t just a ranking issue – it’s a reality check for Reliance, HDFC Bank, TCS and for us as investors. 📉
In this reel, we break down how, for the first time in many years, not a single Indian company features in the global top‑100 by market cap after the 2026 equity crash – with Reliance sliding from rank 57 to around 106, HDFC Bank from 97 to 190, and TCS crashing from the 80s all the way to the 300s.
You’ll see what really went wrong: stretched valuations, weak earnings momentum, relentless FII selling, crude above 100 dollars, rupee depreciation and global risk‑off sentiment all hitting Indian large‑caps at the same time.
You’ll also learn:
Why this doesn’t mean “India is finished”, but does mean we over‑priced perfection and ignored macro risks while US tech giants (especially AI winners) kept compounding far faster.
What long‑term investors should watch now: earnings growth vs valuation, FII flows, crude and rupee trends, and how quickly India can climb back into the global top‑100 club.
For the first time in years, India has zero companies in the world’s top‑100 list. Reliance has dropped to ~106th, HDFC Bank to 190th and TCS to 314th after the 2026 market crash. In this video, I explain what went wrong – FII selling, crude above $100, rupee weakness and over‑stretched valuations – and what this means for Indian investors in Reliance, HDFC Bank, TCS and the Nifty. If you’ve searched ‘no Indian company in world top 100’, ‘Reliance global ranking 2026’ or ‘HDFC Bank TCS fall in market cap’, this breakdown is for you.
IndianStockMarket FIISelling CrudeOil Rupee Nifty50 Sensex Investing202