Nifty Breaks 24,000: Fourth Straight Rally Pushes Index Above 100-Day EMA for First Time Since February
Indian equity markets reached a significant milestone on Thursday, with the Nifty 50 closing at 24,168 — decisively breaking through the psychologically crucial 24,000 barrier for the first time since February 2026. The BSE Sensex tracked the advance, with both indices registering their fourth consecutive session of gains in a rally fuelled by improving global sentiment, the US-Iran peace framework, and strengthening domestic institutional flows.
The session’s technical significance extends beyond the headline number. The Nifty has moved above its 100-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) for the first time since February, a development that technical analysts regard as a bullish signal indicating a potential trend change. The daily Relative Strength Index (RSI) has sustained above the 60 mark for two consecutive sessions, confirming strengthening momentum that suggests the rally has more room to run.
What Drove the Rally
Several factors converged to push markets above the 24,000 resistance level:
US-Iran Peace Framework: The geopolitical backdrop has improved significantly following the announcement of a framework agreement between the US and Iran. Lower geopolitical risk has translated directly into lower crude oil prices — Brent crude has stabilised around $80-83 per barrel — providing relief to India’s import-dependent economy and reducing the inflation risk that had constrained market sentiment.
FII Flow Reversal: Foreign Institutional Investors have shifted from sustained selling to tentative buying, with net purchases in recent sessions signalling a change in sentiment toward Indian equities. The combination of lower oil prices, a stronger rupee, and India’s relatively strong growth outlook is making the market more attractive to foreign capital.
India VIX Collapse: The India VIX — the market’s “fear gauge” — has fallen sharply, declining nearly 7% in a single session. A falling VIX indicates declining uncertainty and growing confidence among market participants, conditions that typically support further upside in equity prices.
Sector Performance
Top Gainers — Trent, BEL, NTPC: Trent led the Nifty with a 2.48% gain, followed by Bharat Electronics (BEL) at 2.09% and NTPC at 1.81%. The outperformance of these companies reflects the rally’s breadth: consumer, defence, and power sectors all participated, suggesting broad-based confidence rather than narrow sectoral leadership.
Banking Strength: SBI gained 1.58% and HDFC Bank rose 1.52%, providing heavyweight support to the indices. The banking sector’s strength is significant because it reflects confidence in the domestic economy and credit growth prospects.
Top Losers — Infosys, Maruti: Infosys fell 2.61% and Maruti Suzuki declined 1.08%, highlighting some profit-taking in sectors that had rallied in recent sessions. The IT sector’s decline was notable given the sector’s recent strength on the back of AI-related optimism.
The Technical Picture
The Nifty’s breakout above 24,000 has transformed the technical landscape. The index traded within a narrow 103-point range for most of the session before a sharp rally in the final 30 minutes pushed it above resistance — a pattern that technical analysts describe as a “breakout with conviction.”
Key levels to watch: support is now established at 24,000 (the previous resistance), with the next major resistance zones at 24,350 and 24,500. A sustained hold above 24,000 would confirm the breakout and potentially attract further buying from momentum traders and systematic strategies.
Looking Ahead
The near-term outlook for Indian markets is constructive but not without risks. The positive macro factors — lower oil prices, improving FII flows, and geopolitical de-escalation — are tangible and significant. However, several headwinds remain:
The monsoon forecast continues to point to below-normal rainfall, which could impact rural demand and agricultural output. The US Federal Reserve’s next policy decision will be closely watched for signals on interest rates and inflation. And valuations, while not extreme, are not cheap by historical standards — the Nifty’s price-to-earnings ratio remains above its long-term average.
For investors, the fourth consecutive session of gains and the decisive break above 24,000 suggest that the path of least resistance is higher in the near term. But as always, markets reward patience and discipline — the ability to stay invested during rallies and manage risk during corrections will determine long-term returns.
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