Nifty may eye 25,500 as strong domestic sentiment, India–EU free trade pact and pre‑Budget positioning support banks, metals and PSU stocks.
Indian stock market investors will enter Thursday’s session with renewed confidence after benchmark indices extended their rebound and closed comfortably in the green on Wednesday, signalling a firm undertone ahead of the Union Budget 2026 and key global cues. The persistent buying interest across sectors, especially in broader markets, reflects a clear risk‑on sentiment even as traders continue to track the US Federal Reserve’s stance and currency movements.
On Wednesday, the Sensex jumped 487.20 points, or 0.60 percent, to end at 82,344.68, while the Nifty 50 climbed 167.35 points, or 0.66 percent, to settle at 25,342.75. Intraday, Nifty oscillated in a fairly wide band between 25,188 and 25,372, capturing a broad‑based appetite for equities as participants looked beyond recent volatility and focused on supportive macro and policy signals. The tone of the session remained constructive as buying emerged consistently on intraday dips, underlining confidence in India’s medium‑term growth story.
A key highlight of the day was the outperformance of broader markets. The Nifty Midcap index advanced close to 1.66 percent, while the Smallcap index surged about 2.26 percent, clearly signalling strong risk appetite in the wider market space. Such strength in mid and smallcaps typically indicates that investors are willing to go down the market‑cap curve in search of earnings growth, structural themes and valuation comfort, instead of restricting themselves only to frontline largecaps. Market breadth stayed comfortably positive, with a larger number of stocks ending higher than those closing in the red on both the NSE and BSE, reinforcing the message that the rally was not limited to a handful of heavyweights.
Sectorally, cyclicals and high‑beta pockets led from the front. Media, Metal, Energy, Oil & Gas, Realty and PSU Banks rallied in the range of roughly 1–4 percent, supported by favourable macros, robust domestic flows and improved risk sentiment. The strength in metals and energy reflects optimism on global demand and pricing, while gains in realty and PSU banks point to expectations of continued domestic capex, credit growth and policy support. On the other hand, defensives such as FMCG, Consumer Durables and Pharma witnessed profit‑booking and ended marginally lower, indicating a rotation of money from safety plays into more growth‑linked sectors as investors positioned for potential positive surprises from the upcoming Budget and trade developments.
One of the biggest macro tailwinds that has brightened Dalal Street’s mood is the conclusion of the long‑awaited India–European Union Free Trade Agreement. The deal, described by European leaders as the “mother of all deals”, is set to cover a combined market of close to 2 billion people, with the two economies together accounting for roughly a quarter of global GDP. The scale and scope of this agreement underline its strategic importance not just for trade, but also for investment, technology transfer and long‑term competitiveness.
The FTA aims to significantly enhance market access, strengthen supply chains and deepen cooperation across manufacturing, services, clean energy, technology and critical minerals. Over time, tariffs on a very large share of bilateral trade will be reduced or eliminated, allowing companies on both sides to tap new opportunities with greater efficiency and lower cost barriers. EU officials have already highlighted that tariffs on over 96 percent of EU goods exported to India will be cut or removed, while Indian exporters will gain improved access for goods and services into the vast EU single market.
For India, this agreement is in sync with flagship programmes such as Make in India and Aatmanirbhar Bharat. Export‑oriented sectors like engineering goods, textiles, auto components, speciality chemicals and select services are expected to benefit over the medium term as they gain more predictable and favourable access to European markets. In the near term, optimism around the growth and investment potential of this pact is helping underpin domestic equities, especially in sectors with strong global linkages and robust balance sheets. Market participants see this as an important structural driver that can support valuations even in phases of global risk‑off, as India’s integration with major trading blocs deepens.
On the global front, attention remains firmly on the US Federal Reserve’s January FOMC outcome. The Fed left interest rates unchanged, reiterating a cautious, data‑dependent approach in light of still‑elevated inflation and a resilient labour market. This decision broadly matched market expectations, thereby reducing immediate policy uncertainty but stopping short of signalling any aggressive near‑term easing. For Indian equities, the status quo on US rates is constructive but not dramatically bullish – it supports global financial stability, helps cap extreme volatility in bond yields and keeps risk appetite reasonably intact across emerging markets.
However, the absence of a strong dovish pivot also means that global liquidity is unlikely to accelerate sharply in the short term. As a result, analysts expect more of a consolidation phase punctuated by stock‑specific and sector‑specific moves, rather than a one‑way runaway rally. Currency movements and capital flows will remain important watchpoints. The rupee has recently tested record lows against the US dollar, driven by foreign fund outflows and hedging demand, even as domestic growth metrics remain robust. The ongoing tug‑of‑war between Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs), who can be sensitive to global risk sentiment, and strong domestic inflows via mutual fund SIPs and insurance money continues to anchor market resilience on bad days and amplify rallies on good days.
From a technical standpoint, the Nifty 50 has staged a strong comeback from oversold territory, improving the short‑term setup in favour of the bulls. The index’s move and close above the 25,180 zone is being read by many analysts as confirmation of a short‑term reversal, shifting the bias back towards the upside. A sustained move towards the 25,500 region is now firmly on the radar, provided follow‑through buying appears on intraday dips and global sentiment does not spring any negative surprises.
That said, market experts remain cautious around higher levels. If the index fails to hold above the 25,400 band, it could trigger a phase of sideways consolidation or mild profit‑booking after the recent sharp rebound. On the downside, a slip below the 25,080–25,100 area may weaken the near‑term structure and open room for a deeper corrective phase towards lower supports. Candlestick patterns also back the constructive stance: Nifty has formed a second consecutive bullish candlestick with a higher high and higher low, reflecting continued recovery from oversold conditions and suggesting room for further upside if momentum is sustained.
Even so, the broader expectation is that the index will spend some time within a consolidation corridor roughly between 24,900 and 25,550, especially as the market navigates through Budget announcements and global central bank commentary. In such an environment, traders are likely to prefer stock‑specific strategies, focusing on themes, earnings and sectoral triggers rather than chasing aggressive index‑level moves.
The banking space is sending a similar message of cautious optimism. Bank Nifty has participated in the rebound, though price action indicates some consolidation at higher zones. The index recently formed a doji‑type candle with a higher high and higher low, a pattern that often signals indecision but, in the context of prior gains, still carries a positive undertone. This typically suggests that bulls remain in control, but are encountering supply at elevated levels, leading more to a pause than a reversal.
Upside triggers and support zones are clearly defined. A decisive move above the recent swing high near 60,400 is expected to open the door for a march towards the 61,500 region, according to technical experts tracking intraday and positional charts. On the downside, immediate trading support is seen around 58,000, with stronger demand zones closer to 57,500, from where dip buyers are likely to re‑enter. Daily momentum indicators and trend‑following oscillators on Bank Nifty remain aligned with a constructive bias as long as the index holds above these key supports. This backdrop favours a measured “buy on dips” approach in quality banking and financial names, especially as the street awaits more earnings commentary and Budget‑linked cues for credit growth and public‑sector reforms.
Volatility is expected to stay elevated in the short term as investors and traders position themselves ahead of the Union Budget scheduled for 1 February 2026. Budget expectations around capital expenditure, taxation tweaks, rural spending, infrastructure push and social sector schemes usually trigger sharp moves in sectors such as infrastructure, capital goods, PSU banks, automobiles and consumption‑linked plays. Intraday swings could widen as both FIIs and domestic institutions rebalance portfolios to reflect policy expectations and the evolving earnings landscape.
From a trading strategy perspective, analysts are broadly recommending a disciplined and measured stance rather than aggressive leveraged bets. For index traders, the clearly demarcated consolidation zone for Nifty and the well‑defined supports on Bank Nifty offer useful reference points for placing stop‑losses and profit targets. For stock‑specific traders, the present environment is more conducive to focusing on sectors and companies with strong earnings visibility, healthy balance sheets and identifiable policy tailwinds – such as select banks, industrials, capital goods, metals, energy and export‑oriented names linked to the India–EU FTA theme.
Amid all this, global factors remain a constant presence in the background. While the Fed’s steady policy stance is a mild positive, any surprise move in US bond yields, risk sentiment in global equities or geopolitical developments can quickly influence FII flows and the rupee, thereby impacting near‑term trends on Dalal Street. Against this backdrop, investors are likely to stay selective, preferring fundamentally strong, well‑managed companies over speculative bets despite the recent rebound. The overall mood, however, remains cautiously optimistic as India heads into a crucial Budget week supported by resilient domestic growth and a powerful new trade agreement with the European Union.

