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Matryoshka Analysis
Let us peel layer after layer of statistical data to arrive at the core message of the markets.
The first chart I share is the NSE advance-decline ratio. After the price itself, this indicator is the fastest (leading) indicator of which way the winds are blowing. This simple yet accurate indicator calculates the ratio of rising to falling stocks. As long as gaining stocks outnumber the losers, the bulls are dominant. This metric is a gauge of the risk appetite of one marshmallow traders. These are pure intraday traders.
The Nifty showed bigger week-on-week gains, but the advance-decline ratio barely showed any improvement. At 1.01 (compared to 0.95 in the prior week), it indicates that there were 101 gaining stocks for every 100 losing shares. Bulls appear to be walking on eggshells rather than buying with confidence. This ratio must stay above 1.0 with rising prices if bulls are to have an upper hand.Â
A tutorial video on the Marshmallow theory in trading is here
The second chart I share is the market-wide position limits (MWPL). This measures the amount of exposure utilized by traders in the derivatives (F&O) space as a component of the total exposure allowed by the regulator. This metric is a gauge of the risk appetite of two marshmallow traders. These are deep-pocketed, high-conviction traders who roll over their trades to the next session.
The MWPL figure continued to rise after the method for computing this yardstick was adjusted as of 1 October. Even if the older method is to be used, the exposure levels of retail traders appear to have risen significantly. That is a double-edged sword. As long as prices are rising, all is well. If any adverse trigger hits the market, there is a likelihood of a crowded exit.
A dedicated tutorial video on how to interpret MWPL data in more ways than one is available here
The third chart I share is my in-house indicator ‘impetus.’ It measures the force in any price move. Last week, both indices rallied, but their impetus readings have fallen. This suggests that the rally was more driven by short-covering-led purchases. For a sustainable rally, it is crucial that price and impetus rally in tandem. This reading is a minor red flag.Â
The final chart I share is my in-house indicator ‘LWTD.’ It computes lift, weight, thrust and drag encountered by any security. These are four forces that any powered aircraft faces during flight, so applying them to traded securities helps a trader estimate prevalent sentiments.
While the Nifty clocked bigger week-on-week gains, the LWTD reading fell sharply to -0.50 (prior week -0.03). That suggests to me that fresh buying support may be tepid this week. Short covering can cushion declines or even trigger a temporary upthrust, but it takes fresh buying to hit new highs.
A tutorial video on interpreting the LWTD indicator is here
Nifty’s Verdict
For a fortnight, I have been advocating watching the 25,550 level as a last-mile hurdle that bulls needed to overcome before any sustainable upthrust could commence. That condition was met, and the Nifty closed above this resistance. The weekly candle is a larger-bodied bullish candle and appears to be placed on the verge of the next upthrust, subject to follow-up buying emerging.
The price is above the 25-week moving average, which serves as a proxy for the average holding price of a retail investor over a six-month period. That means the medium-term outlook is currently positive. As long as the 25,100 level is defended by bulls in case of declines, the outlook remains optimistic. The longer the index closes above 25,550, the better the chances for bulls to push prices higher.
Your Call to Action – Only a sustained trade above the 25,550 level confirms the possibility of a fresh rally.
Last week, I estimated ranges between 57,675 – 55,550 and 25,725 – 24,825 on the Bank Nifty and Nifty, respectively. Both indices rallied past their resistance levels by a narrow margin due to strong buying activity for the second consecutive week.
This week, I estimate ranges between 58,850 – 56,575 and 26,200 – 25,225 on the Bank Nifty and Nifty, respectively.
Trade light with strict stop losses. Avoid trading counters with spreads wider than 6 ticks.Â
Have a profitable week.
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