- The Nifty 50 and Sensex extended their recovery on Tuesday, gaining nearly 1% as market volatility cooled significantly.
- Despite geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and a strong US dollar, the Nifty 50 closed above the 23,550 mark, driven by a 2% surge in metal stocks and strong performance in the auto and realty sectors.
Indian benchmark indices maintained their bullish momentum for the second straight session, tracking positive cues from global peers and a sharp cool-off in domestic volatility. The Nifty 50 index climbed 172.35 points to settle at 23,581.15, while the BSE Sensex jumped 567.99 points to close at 76,070.84.
The most encouraging signal for bulls was the 7.9% decline in the India VIX, which settled at 19.90. This suggests that the “peak fear” seen last week is beginning to subside, even as the market remains sensitive to external shocks. While the IT sector struggled, a 2% surge in the Nifty Metal index, led by Tata Steel, provided the necessary firepower to keep the indices in the green.
Why Nifty 50 share price moved
The recovery was driven by a mix of technical short-covering and selective buying in sectors with strong domestic demand. Key drivers included:
- Easing volatility: The sharp drop in the India VIX indicates that investors are becoming accustomed to the current geopolitical headlines, allowing for value buying at lower levels.
- Metal & auto outperformance: Metal stocks surged on global supply concerns, while the Auto sector gained strength following Tata Motors’ announcement of a price hike for commercial vehicles starting April 2026.
- Defensive buying in pharma: Sun Pharma gained after the US FDA accepted a review for its psoriatic arthritis treatment, highlighting a pivot toward stocks with high revenue visibility.
- DII support: While Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) remained net sellers, Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs) provided a significant cushion, absorbing the selling pressure with net purchases exceeding ₹12,000 crore on Monday alone.
Nifty 50 & Sensex: Performance Snapshot
Both benchmark indices have reclaimed critical psychological levels, marking a strong start to the week despite the heavy outflows seen earlier in March.
| Index | Tuesday Close | Point Change | % Change | 2-Day Gain |
| Nifty 50 | 23,581.15 | +172.35 | 0.74% | 1.86% |
| BSE Sensex | 76,070.84 | +567.99 | 0.75% | 2.02% |
Market breadth remained positive on Tuesday, with 34 of the Nifty 50 constituents closing in the green. However, the broader market remains cautious as indices still trade significantly below their September 2024 highs.
Nifty 50 key technical trade levels to watch:
- Resistance: 23,755.65 This is the immediate ceiling. A break above this 0.236 Fibonacci level is needed to clear the path toward the 24,249 zone and confirm a sustained recovery.
- Invalidation: 23,550.00 This is the “make or break” point for bulls. Staying above this level keeps the short-term rally alive; falling below it signals a return to the recent bearish trend.
- Support: 22,957.30 Sellers are currently defending the higher levels, but this remains the ultimate floor. A drop below this level suggests the short-term recovery is over.
- Next target: 24,648.70 If buyers reclaim control and push past the immediate Fibonacci hurdles, the 0.5 level is the major psychological objective to watch.

Market outlook: war tensions and weekly trends
As we head into the rest of the week, the Indian markets remain in a “wait-and-watch” mode. The ongoing conflict in the Middle East continues to keep Brent crude prices elevated near $103 per barrel, which remains a persistent threat to India’s fiscal deficit and inflation targets. Furthermore, the partial closure of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted global energy lifelines, keeping the Indian Rupee under pressure near the 92.40 mark against the US dollar.
While the two-day rally in the Nifty 50 and Sensex is a positive sign, a “bullish reversal” can only be confirmed if the indices decisively reclaim the 23,800–24,000 range. Until then, the market is likely to witness choppy price action.
Investors should brace for continued FII selling, as global brokerages like Citi and Nomura have recently lowered their year-end targets for the Nifty, citing the impact of higher oil costs on corporate margins.
FAQs: Nifty 50 & Sensex market update
The rally was sparked by a sharp decline in the India VIX and strong support from Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs), who offset heavy FII selling.
The conflict has pushed crude oil prices above $100 and weakened the Rupee, creating a “cautious” environment that limits the upside for Indian equities despite domestic growth.
Technical analysts view 23,550 as the critical level; holding above this is essential for the rally to continue toward 24,000.




