Key Points

The upcoming trading week promises significant market movement driven by corporate earnings and economic indicators. Major companies like Dr. Reddy's and Bajaj Finance will announce their Q1 financial results, potentially influencing investor sentiment. Macroeconomic data including infrastructure output and PMI will provide insights into India's economic health. Global factors such as trade negotiations and international market trends will further shape market dynamics.

Key Points: Q1 Earnings Bajaj Finance Reliance to Drive Market Outlook

  • Major companies like Dr. Reddy's and Bajaj Finance to announce Q1 results
  • Macroeconomic indicators including infrastructure output and PMI crucial
  • Global factors like India-US trade talks may impact market sentiment
  • Benchmark indices witnessed volatility with Sensex dropping 0.90%
2 min read

Market outlook: Q1 results, PMI data, global cues to drive stock market in upcoming week

Key corporate results, PMI data, and global cues set to influence Indian stock markets in crucial trading week ahead

"Nifty closed below 25,000, indicating persistent market caution - Ajit Mishra, Religare Broking"

Mumbai, July 20

The upcoming week is expected to be crucial for Indian stock markets, with a mix of domestic and global factors likely to influence investor sentiment including key Q1 earnings, PMI data, infrastructure output figures, and developments around the India-US trade deal.

Between July 21 and 25, several major companies -- including Dr. Reddy's Laboratories, Bajaj Finance, Nestle India, and Cipla -- will announce their financial results for the first quarter (Q1) of FY26.

The market will also react to the earnings of heavyweights like Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank, and ICICI Bank.

On the macroeconomic front, India will release data on core infrastructure output as well as Manufacturing and Services PMI. These indicators are critical to assessing the overall health of the economy.

Globally, any fresh updates on the India-US trade negotiations, fluctuations in crude oil prices, and upcoming inflation and interest rate data from major economies could sway market sentiment.

Last week, benchmark indices witnessed volatility. The Sensex dropped 742 points or 0.90 per cent to close at 81,757, while the Nifty slipped 181 points or 0.72 per cent to settle at 24,968.

In contrast to large-cap weakness, mid- and small-cap stocks outperformed. The Nifty Midcap 100 gained 462 points or 0.79 per cent to 59,104, while the Nifty Smallcap 100 added 196 points or 1.05 per cent to end at 18,959.

Among sectoral indices, Auto, PSU Banks, Pharma, FMCG, Metal, Realty, Media, Energy, and Commodities ended in the green. However, IT, Financial Services, and Private Banks saw declines.

Ajit Mishra of Religare Broking said, "Nifty closed below the key psychological mark of 25,000, indicating persistent caution in the market. A break below the immediate support level of 24,900 could open the door to further downside, potentially dragging the index towards the 24,450-24,700 range in the coming sessions."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The US trade deal developments will be crucial. Our pharma and IT sectors need that boost desperately. But why is media not discussing how FIIs are pulling out money systematically? That's the real concern behind this volatility.
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Arjun K
As a long-term investor, I see this correction as healthy. Markets had run up too fast. Now we'll see which companies have real earnings power. Excited for RIL and HDFC Bank results - they're the real barometers of Indian economy!
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Sarah B
The PMI data will be more important than earnings this week. Manufacturing growth slowing down while services stay strong shows our economy's structural shift. But we need both engines firing for sustainable 8% GDP growth!
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Karthik V
Small correction: Nifty didn't "slip" 181 points, it corrected after irrational exuberance. Media should stop sensationalizing normal market movements. This is why retail investors panic unnecessarily. #ResponsibleReporting
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Nisha Z
Auto and pharma doing well makes sense - monsoon is good and domestic demand strong. But IT sector worries me. Need to see if TCS/Infosys guidance improves next quarter else might exit my tech holdings 😟

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