“Why Market Fell Today? Nifty Below 26,000 & Tomorrow’s Trade Plan | Nov 25, 2025”
Автор: Sahasra - A Trading Community
Загружено: 2025-11-24
Просмотров: 8764
In this video, the complete analysis of today’s market fall and a clear, actionable trade plan for tomorrow is explained in simple language. The Nifty 50
closed around 25,959, down about 109 points (‑0.42%), while the Sensex
slipped 331 points (‑0.39%) to 84,900 after giving up all its intraday gains. Markets opened firm, tested higher levels near 26,140 on Nifty, but could not sustain and faced selling pressure throughout the second half.
The first key reason for today’s fall was profit booking near record highs. Indices had rallied in 8 out of the last 9 sessions, so traders and short‑term investors used higher levels to book profits for the second straight day. This is natural behaviour after a strong up-move and does not, by itself, signal a trend reversal. The selloff was broad-based across sectors, with only IT managing to stay relatively firm.
Second, weak global cues and nervousness around US Fed policy added pressure. Fading hopes of a quick US rate cut, a stronger dollar, and volatility in global equities made foreign investors cautious on emerging markets like India. As a result, FII flows turned weak again, and sectors sensitive to global growth, like metals and IT, remained under pressure or volatile. Domestic investors did step in, but not enough to offset intraday selling from institutions and traders locking in gains.
Third, there is event risk and data risk ahead. The market is now waiting for India’s GDP data later this week, along with key US inflation and macro numbers. With no major domestic positive trigger on Monday, traders chose to cut risk ahead of these events rather than carry aggressive long positions. This “wait and watch” mode generally leads to choppy moves and intraday reversals, exactly what was seen today.
From a technical perspective, Nifty failed to hold above the 26,100–26,150 resistance zone and slipped back below 26,000, signalling short‑term fatigue. Important support is now placed at 25,900 and then 25,850–25,800. As long as Nifty holds this band, the broader structure remains “bullish but consolidating”. A breakdown below 25,800, however, can open a deeper correction toward 25,600–25,500.
Tomorrow’s Trade Plan (Intraday View)
For tomorrow, the plan is to adopt a “buy on dips, sell near resistance” approach with strict risk control. As long as Nifty trades above 25,900–25,850, intraday traders can look for long opportunities near support zones with upside targets toward 26,050–26,100, placing stop losses just below support. If the index again struggles and rejects 26,100–26,150, partial profit booking or short, low‑risk trades can be considered with clear stops.
Bank Nifty is still relatively stronger, so focus can remain on quality banking names, while being cautious in metals and high beta midcaps. Overall, the message for traders is: this is healthy profit booking and event‑driven volatility, not panic, but position sizing and discipline are critical in the coming sessions.
#StockMarket #Nifty #Sensex #MarketFall #TradePlan #ProfitBooking #FII #Fed #IndianMarkets #PriceAction #NiftyAnalysis #BankNifty #SahasraAlgo
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