The Indian stock market witnessed a subdued trading session on Tuesday, July 22, ending flat with a negative bias amid weak global sentiment and lackluster earnings. Investors appeared cautious, with the market lacking strong directional cues ahead of the upcoming India-US trade deal deadline on August 1.
Market Summary
Broader markets underperformed the benchmarks, with the BSE Midcap index falling 0.62% and the Smallcap index declining 0.17%.
1. Why Did the Markets End Flat?
Despite gains in select heavyweights such as Eternal, ICICI Bank, and HDFC Bank, they were countered by losses in large-cap stocks like Reliance Industries, Larsen & Toubro, ITC, and SBI. The market is witnessing stock-specific movements driven by mixed corporate earnings and concerns around high valuations.
Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services, noted that investor focus is on Q1 earnings and the upcoming US-India trade agreement. He added that consistent FIIs’ profit booking is exerting pressure, while steady DII inflows may support a range-bound movement until clarity emerges.
2. Top Gainers on the Sensex
3. Top Losers on the Sensex
4. Sectoral Performance
Most sectors ended in the red:
5. Most Active Stocks by Volume (NSE)
6. Stocks That Surged Over 10% on BSE
Despite market weakness, a few stocks defied the trend:
These stocks posted gains of over 10% during the session.
7. Stocks That Crashed Over 10% on BSE
These stocks saw sharp declines of over 10%.
8. Advance-Decline Ratio on BSE
Out of 4,198 traded stocks:
This reflects a negative market breadth.
9. 52-Week Highs and Lows
52-Week Highs (Intraday):
52-Week Lows (Intraday):
10. Nifty Technical Outlook
Shrikant Chouhan, Head of Equity Research at Kotak Securities, stated that the current market trend remains non-directional. He advised traders to follow a level-based strategy:
A sustained move above 25,000 could trigger a pullback, but if breached, Nifty might fall to 24,900, with further downside potentially reaching 24,775, he added.