closed Friday’s session on a positive note, extending gains for the fifth consecutive day, as easing tensions, softer crude prices, and a strengthening rupee kept investor sentiment constructive — even if the pace of the rally dialled down from earlier in the week.
The settled at 78,493.54, gaining 504.86 points or 0.65 per cent, while the closed at 24,353.55, up 156.80 points or 0.65 per cent.
For the week, the Nifty gained 1.3 per cent, capping a remarkable ten-session run that has seen the index rally nearly 10 per cent from its recent lows.
Broader markets once again outpaced the benchmarks, with the Midcap 100 rising 1.3 per cent and the Smallcap 100 gaining 1.5 per cent on the day. Over the past 15 sessions, the Smallcap index has rebounded nearly 17 per cent, with the Midcap index recovering around 15 per cent.
The dominant theme of the session was a decisive rotation into defensives.
The Nifty FMCG index surged over 2.6 per cent, emerging as the clear sectoral leader, driven by a combination of price hikes, healthy business updates, and valuation comfort.
Hindustan Unilever and Nestle India were the top Nifty gainers on the day. VST Industries and Colgate-Palmolive also attracted strong buying. IT was the sole sectoral laggard, with Wipro and HDFC Life closing with losses following earnings-related concerns. Of the Nifty 500 universe, 402 stocks ended in the green.
The geopolitical backdrop continued to ease. A 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, combined with renewed optimism around US–Iran diplomatic engagement, pushed crude meaningfully lower — US oil prices fell over 4.7 per cent, slipping below the $90 mark, while Brent held below the $100 threshold.
India VIX declined below the 18 mark to around 17.7, its lowest since the onset of recent tensions, signalling a gradual unwinding of the conflict-driven risk premium.
Hariprasad K, SEBI-registered Research Analyst and Founder of Livelong Wealth, noted that “…the market appears to be transitioning into a more stable phase after recent volatility, supported by easing geopolitical risks, cooling volatility, and sectoral rotation.”
— a gain of 28 paise — supported by a softer dollar index hovering near 98, improving risk sentiment, and expectations around India-US trade discussions.
The currency briefly dipped below the 93 mark during the session. Crucially, FIIs turned net buyers for the second straight session, picking up ₹382 crore, marking a trend shift that markets will be watching closely.
On the technical front, the Nifty held firmly above its 50-day EMA and has now ended three consecutive weeks in the green — the first such streak since November 2025. Immediate resistance sits at 24,400, followed by the more significant 24,800–24,850 zone where the 200-day EMA coincides with notable open interest build-up.
Ajit Mishra of Religare Broking flagged that “…gains remained capped due to stock-specific pressure, particularly in select heavyweight names following earnings-related concerns, along with cautious positioning ahead of key results from private banking majors.”
That earnings calendar will define early trade next week. Results from HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, and Yes Bank are due on Saturday and are likely to set the tone for the banking sector.
As Siddhartha Khemka of Motilal Oswal put it, “…Indian equities are likely to consolidate at higher levels next week,” with the critical monitorable being the second round of US–Iran diplomatic talks, with a ceasefire deadline of April 22 fast approaching. Any breakthrough — or breakdown — on that front could swiftly alter the market’s carefully rebuilt composure.
