Dalal Street Roars Back: Sensex Surges ~1,000 Points as Bulls Retake Control
Indian equities staged a powerful recovery on Wednesday, erasing Tuesday’s losses in emphatic fashion. A cocktail of strong quarterly earnings, bargain-hunting in IT, and renewed buying in defence and banking stocks drove the Sensex up nearly a thousand points intraday, with broad market participation confirming the rebound’s credibility.
Indices at a Glance
The Nifty 50 opened at 24,097, touched an intraday high of 24,237 and a low of 24,060. Forty of the fifty index constituents ended in the green, with market breadth firmly in favour of buyers. The Sensex’s intraday peak of 77,879 marked a 992-point swing from Tuesday’s close, before a mild late-session pullback. Small- and mid-cap indices outpaced the large-cap benchmarks, with the Nifty Smallcap 100 rising 1.20% and the Nifty Midcap 100 up 0.85%.
Top Gainers & Losers
What Drove the Rally
Tuesday’s session had left markets nursing wounds — the Nifty slipped below 24,000 for the first time in days, the Bank Nifty crashed 864 points to 55,400, and FII selling continued unabated. Wednesday’s turnaround was therefore all the more striking.
Earnings were the central catalyst. Garden Reach Shipbuilders delivered a blowout quarter — net profit up 24% year-on-year to ₹303 crore, revenue up 29% to ₹2,119 crore, and EBITDA rising 27% — capped by a dividend announcement of ₹6.7 per share. The stock’s 14.4% surge dragged Mazagon Dock along for the ride, cementing the defence shipbuilding theme as one of the most compelling stories on Dalal Street this earnings season.
Bandhan Bank’s 68% year-on-year profit jump to ₹534 crore, combined with NIM expansion to 6.2% and management guiding for a further 10–20 basis point improvement over the next two to three quarters, triggered a wave of broker upgrades from MOFSL, JM Financial, and Nuvama — sending the stock up 10% on the day.
The IT pack staged a meaningful recovery after weeks of correction. With the Nifty IT index sitting nearly 27% below its peak, bottom-fishing was the dominant theme. Tech Mahindra led the charge with a 3.31% gain, followed by Infosys, Mphasis, and TCS. L&T was the sole holdout, dipping 0.33%. A broader value argument — long track records, high dividend yields, and valuations at rock-bottom levels — is beginning to attract contrarian buying.
ITC’s 3.79% advance and solid contributions from Reliance Industries, Bharti Airtel, and Mahindra & Mahindra gave the index its heft. The auto sector also played a supporting role, with IndusInd Bank and several mid-cap auto plays adding momentum.
The sole sour note was the metals and non-energy minerals pack. JSW Steel, Jindal Steel, Hindalco, and National Aluminium all lost 1.5–1.8%, dragged by weak global metal pricing and concerns around industrial demand. NTPC’s 1.66% decline was the other notable laggard in the large-cap space.
Earnings Spotlight — Q4 FY26 Results
Evening results from Bajaj Finance, Adani Power, Vedanta, Waaree Energies, Mphasis, and Federal Bank will be closely watched — their numbers and management commentary will likely set the tone for Thursday’s open.
FII vs DII — The Institutional Tussle
The push-pull between foreign and domestic institutions continued to define the market’s character. Foreign institutional investors remained net sellers through the week, their appetite dampened by elevated crude oil prices, the unresolved US–Iran conflict at the Strait of Hormuz, and uncertainty ahead of the US Federal Reserve’s upcoming rate decision.
The April 27 provisional data told the story clearly — FIIs sold a net ₹944 crore while DIIs absorbed ₹3,871 crore. This domestic institutional support has been the single most important stabilising force for Indian equities through this volatile stretch. Without it, the impact of FII selling would have been considerably more punishing.
Macro Landscape
The broader macro picture remains one of cautious navigation through several live crosswinds. Brent crude around $112 a barrel continues to be the most uncomfortable variable for India — a net importer — widening the current account deficit and keeping inflationary pressures elevated. The US–Iran conflict, with ongoing disruption at the Strait of Hormuz, shows no sign of quick resolution.
On the currency front, USD/INR futures were quoted near ₹92.50, a level that adds cost pressure for import-heavy industries. The Federal Reserve’s upcoming decision on interest rates is being watched closely — any hawkish signal could strengthen the dollar and accelerate FII outflows from emerging markets.
One potential positive: news of the UAE’s planned exit from OPEC in May introduced fresh optimism that the oil supply discipline enforced by the cartel may soften, which could eventually ease crude prices. Asian markets were mixed on the day; European indices traded flat to slightly positive.
On the domestic side, the IMF’s recent upgrade of India’s FY27 GDP growth forecast to approximately 6.5% continues to underpin longer-term confidence in the India growth story, even as near-term volatility remains elevated.
Banking Sector — The ECL Cloud
Despite today’s recovery, the banking sector carries an additional structural uncertainty. The RBI recently finalised its Expected Credit Loss (ECL) provisioning framework, set to take effect from April 1, 2027. The framework requires banks to shift from an incurred-loss model to a forward-looking approach — setting aside provisions based on anticipated stress in loan portfolios, rather than waiting for defaults to materialise.
This is considered a prudent long-term reform, but in the short term it is expected to raise provisioning requirements for several lenders. The Bank Nifty, which had crashed 864 points on Tuesday partly in response to this news, staged a partial recovery today — though it remains an area investors will watch carefully through the remainder of the earnings season.
Outlook for Thursday, 30 April 2026