Indian Markets Rebound: How Global Cues Sparked a Bullish Week-End

Indian stock markets finished the week on a strong note, breaking a four-day losing streak. The rally was fueled by positive global signals, including encouraging US inflation data. Earlier pressure came from foreign investor outflows and concerns about the Japanese bond market. Looking ahead, analysts expect a cautiously positive trend but warn that volatility could continue.

Key Points: Indian Stock Market Ends Week Higher on Positive Global Cues

  • Nifty surged 0.58% on the final day, closing at 25,966 after a softer US CPI print
  • Markets were weighed down earlier by FII outflows and global uncertainties
  • Realty, Auto, and Healthcare sectors led the gains during the positive week
  • Analysts see key resistance for Nifty at 26,200-26,300 with support at 25,700-25,800
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Indian indices end week in bullish tone over positive global cues

Indian equity benchmarks Sensex and Nifty closed the week higher, snapping a losing streak amid softer US inflation data and lower crude oil prices.

"Bargain hunting and lower crude prices helped large caps drive a late rebound, trimming most of the week’s losses. - Market Watchers"

Mumbai, Dec 20

Indian equity benchmarks closed on a strong note this week, snapping a four-day losing streak amid positive global cues stemming from US inflation data.

The market ended the week in a bullish tone with Nifty surging 0.18 per cent during the week and 0.58 per cent on the last trading day to 25,966, after a softer US CPI print boosted expectations of a milder Fed stance.

At close, the Sensex was up 447.55 points or 0.53 per cent at 84,929.

Indian equities were traded in a cautious tone for most of the week, weighed down by persistent FII outflows, rupee depreciation, and heightened global uncertainties.

Further, early sessions also saw pressure from rising Japanese bond yields and expectations of Bank of Japan (BoJ) tightening, which amplified risk-off sentiment across emerging markets.

Bargain hunting and lower crude prices helped large caps drive a late rebound, trimming most of the week’s losses, market watchers said.

Broader indices also rose marginally during the week, with the Nifty Midcap100 up 0.04 per cent, while Nifty Smallcap100 was unchanged during the week. It gained 1.34 per cent at the close.

On the sectoral front, all sectors traded with a positive bias. Major contributions came from Nifty Realty, Auto, Healthcare, and Chemicals, while other sectors also posted modest gains.

Nifty has 26,200-26,300 as stiff resistance levels while 25,700–25,800 levels will act as support zone, they added.

Analysts said markets will likely maintain a cautiously positive bias in near future but remain highly sensitive to global cues.

Key drivers going forward include comments from the global central banks for the 2026 policy trajectory. While sentiment remains constructive, near-term volatility may persist amid uncertainty over trade deal timelines and the Indian rupee stability, they added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good to see Realty and Auto leading. Maybe a sign of renewed confidence in the economy? But the article is right, FII outflows and rupee depreciation are big concerns. Hope the support at 25,700 holds.
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Rohit P
"Cautiously positive bias" is the perfect term. One good US data point and we rally, but our own macros need work. The volatility is not for the faint-hearted. Time to hold quality stocks and ignore the daily noise.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see how interconnected everything is now. Inflation in the US, bond yields in Japan... it all affects the Sensex in Mumbai. Makes long-term planning a real challenge for investors here.
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Vikram M
Smallcap unchanged for the week is telling. The rally was very narrow, driven by large caps. Broader market participation is missing, which isn't a great sign for a sustained bull run. Just my two paise.
K
Karthik V
Lower crude prices are a silent hero here. Helps our CAD, helps inflation, helps sentiment. Hope it stays that way. Now if only the FIIs would stop pulling money out every other day!

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