The past week was a classic example of how global uncertainty and domestic strength can coexist. While global markets struggled under the weight of geopolitical tensions, rising crude oil prices, a sharp sell-off in US equities and weakness across Asian markets, India delivered a series of developments that reinforced confidence in its long-term growth story.
Strong GDP growth, a supportive RBI policy stance and government measures aimed at attracting foreign capital have created a fundamentally positive backdrop for Indian markets. Although short-term volatility may persist, the broader trend continues to favour India’s structural growth story.
India’s GDP Growth Reaffirms Economic Leadership
The biggest positive trigger for Indian markets came from the latest GDP numbers. India’s economy expanded by 7.7% during FY26, while Q4 GDP growth came in at 7.8% — once again establishing India as the fastest-growing major economy globally.
The growth was driven by:
- Strong domestic consumption
- Robust manufacturing activity
- Continued government capital expenditure
- Healthy services sector growth
- Improving private sector investments
Why this matters
Economic growth remains the ultimate driver of corporate earnings. A GDP growth rate close to 8% provides a strong foundation for banking expansion, infrastructure development, manufacturing growth, capital goods demand and consumption-led earnings growth.
For equity investors, strong GDP growth translates into stronger earnings visibility and better valuation support.
Government’s Major Reform: LTCG Exemption for Foreign Investors
In a significant policy move, the Government of India announced the removal of capital gains tax and interest tax on specified investments by foreign investors in Indian government securities.
This reform aims to:
- Attract long-term foreign capital
- Deepen India’s bond market
- Improve rupee stability
- Enhance India’s attractiveness as a global investment destination
Why equity investors should care
While the measure directly targets debt markets, its indirect impact on equities could be substantial. More foreign capital entering India means improved liquidity conditions, greater confidence among global investors, reduced pressure on the rupee and better funding conditions across financial markets. This reform further strengthens India’s case as a preferred emerging-market destination.
RBI MPC Outcome: Growth and Stability in Focus
The Reserve Bank of India maintained the repo rate at 5.25%, while reiterating its commitment to balancing growth and inflation. The RBI’s latest policy sends a clear message:
- Growth remains resilient
- Inflation remains manageable
- Financial stability remains a priority
- Capital-inflow measures will support market liquidity
Why markets like this
The combination of strong GDP growth and stable interest rates creates one of the most favourable environments for corporate earnings and equity markets. Banking, NBFCs, infrastructure and capital goods sectors remain key beneficiaries of this policy environment.
Rupee Strengthens Despite Global Volatility
One of the encouraging developments this week was the relative stability of the Indian Rupee. The Rupee closed near ₹95.395 per US Dollar, supported by RBI measures and expectations of stronger foreign capital inflows.
Technical view: USDINR
A controlled rupee depreciation remains beneficial for IT companies, pharmaceutical exporters and specialty chemical exporters. At the same time, stability in the currency helps contain imported inflation risks.
US-Iran Tensions Push Crude Oil Higher
The biggest global risk currently remains the escalating geopolitical tension involving Iran and the United States. Concerns over potential disruptions in Middle Eastern oil supplies pushed Brent crude sharply higher during the week.
Brent crude traded near $93 per barrel, remaining the most important macroeconomic variable for emerging markets.
Technical levels: Brent crude
Higher crude prices can increase import costs, put pressure on inflation, affect the fiscal deficit and impact currency stability. However, India’s stronger foreign-exchange reserves and improved macroeconomic framework provide a significant cushion compared to previous cycles.
US Market Crash Sparks Global Risk-Off Sentiment
Friday witnessed a sharp sell-off in US equities. Major US indices declined significantly:
The correction was triggered by stronger-than-expected economic data, which raised concerns that US interest rates may remain elevated for longer. Historically, sharp declines in US markets trigger risk-off sentiment globally, FII selling in emerging markets and short-term volatility in equities.
Why India is different
Unlike previous cycles, Indian markets today enjoy strong support from record SIP inflows, domestic institutional investors, strong corporate earnings and healthy economic growth. This significantly reduces dependence on foreign flows.
Asian Markets Follow Global Weakness
Following the US sell-off, major Asian markets also witnessed broad-based weakness. Key concerns included geopolitical tensions, elevated crude prices, a stronger US Dollar and global growth uncertainty.
However, India continues to demonstrate relative resilience due to superior economic growth, strong domestic demand, a healthy banking sector and a government-led investment cycle. India increasingly appears to be the strongest macro story within the Asian region.
Gold and Silver: Safe Havens Witness Profit Booking
After an extraordinary rally over recent months, precious metals experienced some consolidation.
COMEX Gold
Gold remains in a long-term bullish trend supported by central-bank buying, geopolitical uncertainty and currency-debasement concerns. However, short-term profit booking is natural after a strong rally.
COMEX Silver
Silver continues to benefit from both safe-haven demand and industrial demand from renewable energy, EVs and electronics. The long-term outlook remains constructive despite short-term volatility.
Nifty 50: Technical Analysis
The Indian market displayed remarkable resilience despite adverse global cues.
The broader trend remains bullish as long as Nifty sustains above the 22,800 zone. Domestic liquidity continues to absorb global volatility effectively.
Bank Nifty: Leading the Bull Market
A strong banking sector is essential for sustaining economic growth. With strong GDP growth, stable interest rates, healthy credit growth and strong balance sheets, Bank Nifty remains one of the strongest pillars supporting the ongoing market uptrend.
Connecting the Dots: How Everything Impacts Indian Markets
| Factor | Impact on India |
|---|---|
| GDP Growth (7.7%) | Strong Positive |
| RBI Stability | Positive |
| LTCG Exemption for Foreign Investors | Strong Positive |
| Rupee Stability | Positive |
| US Market Correction | Short-Term Negative |
| Asian Market Weakness | Mild Negative |
| Higher Crude Oil | Moderate Negative |
| Gold/Silver Consolidation | Positive for Equities |
| Strong Domestic Flows | Strong Positive |
| Banking Sector Strength | Strong Positive |
Net assessment
Domestic positives currently outweigh external negatives. India’s market is increasingly driven by domestic savings, SIP inflows, corporate earnings, government capex and structural economic growth — rather than solely by global events.
Conclusion: India’s Structural Bull Story Remains Intact
The past week highlighted an important reality: while global markets remain vulnerable to geopolitical tensions, crude oil shocks and US market volatility, India’s domestic fundamentals continue to strengthen. The combination of strong GDP growth, stable RBI policy, foreign-capital-friendly reforms, strong banking-sector performance and robust domestic liquidity creates a favourable backdrop for Indian equities.
Global volatility may continue to create periodic corrections, but such declines are increasingly becoming opportunities rather than threats for long-term investors.
Action Plan for Investors
Long-Term Investors
- Continue SIP investments without interruption.
- Use market corrections for gradual accumulation.
- Focus on Banking, Infrastructure, Capital Goods, Defence, Manufacturing and Power sectors.
- Maintain a cash allocation of 10–15% for opportunities.
Traders
- Prefer buying on meaningful dips rather than chasing rallies.
- Monitor Brent crude above $100.
- Watch USDINR near 96.
- Keep an eye on Nifty 22,800 and Bank Nifty 52,800 as major support levels.
Final view
India remains one of the most compelling investment destinations globally. While global headlines may continue to create volatility, the country’s economic momentum, policy stability and capital-market reforms continue to support a constructive outlook for both investors and traders.
This briefing is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice. Technical levels are indicative; please consult a SEBI-registered adviser before acting.
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