
India’s stock market kicked off the week with fireworks. The Sensex surged over 600 points, while the Nifty reclaimed the 25,000 mark, lifted by banks, energy, and midcap stocks. At 9:30 am on May 26, the Sensex stood tall at 82,338.13, up 617 points, and the Nifty clocked 25,034.45, up 181 points.
For everyday investors, that’s a solid reason to breathe easy—at least for now. Even with recent global jitters, domestic momentum is refusing to fade.

So, what’s driving the rally?
Let’s break it down.
Despite heavy foreign investor selling last week, Indian markets held their ground, thanks to strong retail and domestic institutional buying. With global fears easing—especially after President Trump delayed new tariffs on European imports—global risk appetite is recovering. Toss in a positive forecast for monsoon rains and cooling crude oil prices, and you’ve got a bullish brew.
All sectoral indices turned green today. The Nifty Bank rose 0.71%, Nifty Metal was up 0.84%, and Nifty Energy jumped 0.87%. IT, auto, pharma, and FMCG also chipped in.
But it’s the midcaps and smallcaps that are stealing the spotlight.
The Nifty Midcap 100 rose 0.5%, and the Smallcap 100 gained 0.4%. After a rocky start to the year, these indices have trimmed most of their losses. As V K Vijayakumar from Geojit says, “Midcaps have outperformed in Q4 earnings, cooling off their overheated valuations.”
Now, let’s talk stocks.
Tata Motors climbed over 1% after news broke that Trump postponed his 50% import tariff plan on EU cars. That’s a breather for Jaguar Land Rover. Ashok Leyland, despite reporting a 38% jump in profit, stayed mostly flat. Perhaps the market had already priced it in.
But not all were lucky. Eternal Ltd. (formerly Zomato) sank nearly 4% amid reports that global index funds like FTSE and MSCI plan to reduce its weightage, triggering potential passive outflows worth $840 million.
Technicals paint a cautious picture. While Nifty’s next resistance is 25,200, any drop below 24,500 could invite a slide to 24,100. Bank Nifty, though, is flashing bullish signals, with analysts spotting an “inverse head & shoulders” formation—code for, “the bulls are back.”
Still, volatility is creeping up. India VIX rose 3.36% to 17.86. So stay nimble.
The takeaway?
The Indian market is moving with confidence, not chaos. With macro tailwinds, better-than-expected earnings, and FII jitters subsiding (for now), bulls have the upper hand. But don’t mistake this sprint for a marathon just yet.
Disclaimer:
This article is for information only and not financial advice. Please do your own research or talk to a financial expert before investing. Investing has risks, and past results don’t guarantee future success.
Read more Himanta Biswa Sarma Exposes a Shocking Truth About Bangladesh’s Geography