Sensex Eyes Fifth Straight Gain — Traders Watch Key Resistance Levels
Indian equity benchmarks climbed for a fourth consecutive session on Wednesday, with the Sensex adding over 400 points as buying interest spread across banking, auto, and IT sectors. Market participants in Mumbai and across major trading hubs are now asking whether the rally has enough steam to deliver a fifth straight day of gains when trade resumes on Thursday.
Markets Extend Their Winning Streak
The BSE Sensex settled at 76,850, its highest close in three weeks, while the Nifty50 ended the day at 23,320 after touching an intraday high of 23,410. Both benchmarks have now recovered the ground they lost during a sharp correction earlier this month, when concerns over foreign fund outflows and rising crude oil prices rattled investor confidence.
Trading volumes on the National Stock Exchange remained healthy at 1.85 billion shares, above the 30-day average, suggesting that institutional players are actively rotating capital back into domestic equities. Foreign institutional investors have purchased nearly Rs 8,000 crore of Indian stocks over the past five trading sessions, reversing the selling trend that dominated March and early April.
Sectors Driving the Recovery
The rally has not been broad-based. Financial stocks, particularly private sector lenders, led the advance with gains of between 2.5 and 4 percent. State Bank of India and HDFC Bank were among the top contributors to the Sensex gain, lifting the index by a combined 180 points. Automakers also posted strong numbers, with Maruti Suzuki and Tata Motors each climbing more than 2 percent on the back of healthy monthly sales data.
IT and Pharma Find Support
Technology stocks, which had lagged behind the broader market for months, finally joined the uptrend. Infosys and TCS each gained around 1.8 percent, supported by a stabilisation in the rupee against the dollar and renewed interest from global funds looking to increase their exposure to Indian IT companies ahead of the earnings season. Pharma stocks also posted modest gains, with Sun Pharma closing up 1.4 percent in Mumbai trade.
What Is Fueling the Optimism
Several factors have combined to restore confidence among buyers. First, crude oil prices have softened from their April peaks, easing pressure on India's current account deficit and reducing fears of another inflation shock. Second, domestic macroeconomic data released this week showed industrial output growing at a faster clip than expected, reinforcing views that the Indian economy remains on a solid footing despite global headwinds.
Third, and perhaps most importantly, the Reserve Bank of India's rate-setting committee meeting scheduled for early next month is widely expected to hold rates steady. Markets have interpreted the central bank's recent commentary as decidedly dovish, which has pushed bond yields lower and made equities relatively more attractive to yield-seeking investors.
Risks That Could Derail the Rally
Not everyone is convinced the good times will last. Bears point out that global conditions remain unpredictable. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East could push crude prices higher again, while a stronger-than-expected US jobs report could delay Federal Reserve rate cuts, strengthening the dollar and potentially triggering another wave of outflows from Indian markets.
Valuations also concern some analysts. The Nifty50 is currently trading at 22 times forward earnings, a premium to its five-year average of 19 times. At those levels, any disappointment in the upcoming corporate earnings season could prompt a quick reversal. Small-cap and mid-cap stocks, which have been the real beneficiaries of the retail investor boom, remain particularly vulnerable to a pullback if sentiment shifts.
Retail Investors Stay on the Sidelines
One notable feature of the current rally is the relatively muted participation from retail investors. Systematic investment plan inflows through mutual funds have slowed compared to January and February, when new fund offers were oversubscribed within hours. Market veterans in Bengaluru and Kolkata say many retail participants are still nursing losses from the March correction and are waiting for clearer signals before committing fresh capital.
Broking houses report that new account openings have also declined from the frenetic pace seen last year. This matters because retail investors have been a crucial source of demand for Indian equities over the past two years, helping the market weather multiple external shocks without a sustained bear phase.
What Comes Next for Indian Equities
Thursday's session will serve as a test. If the Nifty50 can hold above the 23,300 level and close in positive territory, it will mark the fifth consecutive day of gains for the first time since January. That would be a psychological boost and could attract momentum-driven funds back into the market.
Investors should watch two data releases scheduled for Thursday morning. India's wholesale inflation figure for April will give the Reserve Bank of India another data point to consider at its June meeting. Separately, the United States Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge is due out later in the day, and a hotter-than-expected reading could spark volatility across global markets, including Indian stocks.
The next two weeks will bring the first-quarter earnings reports from India's largest companies. Expectations are modest — analysts are forecasting aggregate profit growth of around 8 percent for the Nifty50 constituents, down from 12 percent in the previous quarter. A beat on those estimates could sustain the rally; a miss could quickly deflate the current optimism.
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