Expect the markets to be volatile in the week ahead
The strategy for the week would be to look for weakness to initiate longs and use sharp rallies to sell into
Expect the markets to be volatile in the week ahead

It was an eventful week and yet another example where it is not advisable to carry forward positions on a weekend. USA attacked Iran on Saturday led by precision attacks by Israel which killed the Iran Supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
With the man who was defiant, out of the way it would be fair to assume that the US-Iran war will not be a long one but would fizzle out faster than it began.
Of course there would be knee jerk reactions and we are seeing them with Iran attacks on neighboring countries in the Middle East, but they are nothing more than bravado. Expect this to die a natural death.
Coming to the markets, we had a bad Friday and markets fell sharply, so much so that a flattish or sideways week became a bad week. BSESENSEX lost 1,527.52 points or 1.84 per cent to close at 81,287.19 points while NIFTY lost 392.60 points or 1.54 per cent to close at 25,178.65 points. BANK-NIFTY lost 643.00 points or 1.05 per cent to close at 60,529 points.
The broader markets saw BSE100, BSE-200 and BSE500 lose 1.29 per cent, 1.04 per cent and 0.96 per cent respectively.
BSE-MIDCAP was down 0.52 per cent while BSE-SMALL-CAP lost 1.11 per cent. It is important to note that BSE-SENSEX lost 961 points while NIFTY lost 318 points on Friday. BSE-SENSEX gained on two of the five trading sessions while NSE-NIFTY gained on three of the five trading sessions.
The Indian Rupee lost 5paisa or 0.05 per cent to close at Rs 91.05 to the US Dollar. Dow Jones lost 126.77 points or 0.26 per cent to close at 49,499.20 points. Dow gained on four of the five trading sessions and lost on one.
February futures expiry ended on a positive series gain for the bulls but not before a scare on expiry day where there was a sell off. The series gained 249 .25 points or 0.99 per cent to end the series at 25,424.65 points.
In primary markets we had one listing on Friday when shares of Gaudium IVF and Women Health Limited listed. Shares which were issued at Rs 79 debuted at Rs 83 and after hitting a high of Rs 87.15, fell to close at Rs 80.48, a gain of Rs 1.48 or 1.87 per cent.
There are some issues which would get listed in the coming week as well as some which would be opening for subscription. The stance mentioned last week where it makes sense to look at IPOs on listing only and not subscribe, continues.
Coming to FPIs current mood in the markets, it appeared that they were slowly turning buyers and stopping their aggressive selling. All was going well until Friday when suddenly they sold big. As much as Rs 7,500 crores was sold in a single day.
For the month they were net sellers of Rs 11,000 crores which means prior to Friday they were sellers of a mere Rs 3,500 crores. DIIs were net buyers of Rs 17,300 crores for the month.
The week ahead has a trading holiday on Tuesday the 3rd of March on account of ‘Holi’. Any midweek holiday upsets market momentum. This should be kept in mind in the coming week.
Coming to the week ahead, expect markets to remain choppy and volatile. While the US-Iran conflict will die a natural death with Ayatollah dead, expect some knee jerk reaction. On the negative side we have broken 25,300 and closed at 25,178 points.
This opens the possibility of markets going down all the way to 24,700 points where solid support exists. On the positive side, there is resistance at 25,700 points and higher up at 26,000 points. Any fresh up move past these levels need really big news which seems unlikely at this time.
Readers would recall that I had highlighted that with Trump losing through the Supreme Court on tariffs, he would use diversionary tactics and he did exactly that. The unfortunate part is that his ally Israel, knocked out the Ayatollah in the very first attack. This will embolden Trump even further and he may try it some other place. God help us.
The strategy for the week would be to look for weakness to initiate longs and use sharp rallies to sell into. While markets would be volatile on a daily basis they must not do much on a weekly basis. Trade cautiously and avoid weekend positions.
(The author is the founder of Kejriwal Research and Investment Services,
an advisory firm)

