The 30-share Sensex ended at 19,293 down 134 points or 0.69% and the 50-share Nifty ended at 5,835 down by 37 points or 0.64%.
The Sensex and the Nifty reached an intra-day low of 19,232 levels and 5,814 mark, respectively.
On the global front, Asian markets witnessed a sell-off after the Cyprus announced that it would impose a one-time 10% tax on private bank deposits in exchange for equity shares in the bank, to avail credit of 10 billion euros from global lenders for shoring up the nation's financial position.
The surprise decision by euro zone leaders to part-fund a rescue of Cyprus by taxing bank deposits sent shockwaves through financial markets on Monday, with shares, the euro and the bonds of its southern members all tumbling.
The euro zone struck a deal on Saturday to hand Cyprus a bailout worth 10 billion euros, but defied warnings -- including from the European Central Bank -- and imposed a levy that will see those with cash in the island's banks lose between 6.75 and 9.9 per cent of their money.
Back home, the rupee is trading at 54.28/29 versus its previous close of 54.02/03, tracking losses in the domestic equity market and a broad risk-off globally.
On the sectoral front, BSE Metal index plunged over 2% followed by counters like PSU, Auto, Realty, Oil & Gas, Power, IT and Banks, all slipping between 1-2%. However, BSE FMCG index gained by nearly 1%.
Metal shares were trading lower amid weak metal futures on the London Metal Exchange, weighed down by selling pressure in Coal India.
Coal India witnessed selling pressure on Monday and was down over 5% on reports that the government is planning to sell up to 10% of its holding in the world’s largest coal producer through the offer-for-sale (OFS) route.
Steel shares were also among the top losers in the index with Jindal Steel, Sterlite, Tata Steel nd JSW Steel down 1-3 each.
Rate sensitive shares were down after hopes of a rate cut faded with better-than-expected
Bobby Jindal escapes unhurt after SUV crash
Markets end lower as rate cut hopes fade
Heavy dollar demand sinks rupee by 40 paise
Markets end lower amid weak global cues
Markets end higher led by bank shares