- As per astrological views, key turning dates are 1st, 3rd, 5th, 8th, 10th and 12th June 2026. The period from 1st to 23rd June 2026 may remain challenging, with the possibility of heightened conflicts and volatility. Caution is advised in both markets and personal matters during this phase.
- Big Alert: As per market grapevine, Iran and the USA appear to be buying time, with neither side fully escalating nor de-escalating the conflict. Elevated crude oil prices continue to benefit major oil-producing nations, while India remains vulnerable as one of the largest importers. If the Strait of Hormuz does not fully reopen within the next 20–30 days, it could negatively impact India’s economy, push inflation higher, and increase pressure on financial markets.
- Fear sells, greed buys, wisdom waits. Investors often panic during market declines and become overconfident during rallies. This usually results in selling at lower levels and buying at higher levels. Long-term wealth creation comes from patience, research, discipline, and the ability to stay focused when emotions are running high.
- Big Alert: Friday’s weakness in the Nifty and broader markets was largely linked to MSCI rebalance expectations. India may see 4 additions and 4 exclusions in the MSCI Standard Index, with estimated passive outflows of USD 800 million–1 billion. Small-cap stocks may face additional pressure due to multiple exclusions from the MSCI Small Cap Index, explaining the weakness in select large-cap and broader small-cap counters.
- Smart money doesn’t chase prices—it traps traders first. The Spring Candle is a powerful stop-loss hunting pattern used to shake out weak hands before a sharp reversal. Such setups are common across stocks, indices, commodities, forex, and cryptocurrencies. In volatile markets, understanding these moves can help traders avoid emotional decisions and false breakouts.
- Success is built through daily discipline. Most people do not lack potential; they simply repeat the same habits. Small, consistent improvements compound into meaningful results over time. Upgrade your habits, standards, mindset, and circle of influence. Stay focused, trust the process, and remember that lasting success is created through consistency, not shortcuts.
- The most dangerous pandemic of this century may not be a virus—it may be the one-child pandemic. One child carrying the expectations of two parents, four grandparents, and an entire family legacy. Growing up in quieter homes, with fewer shared experiences and deeper emotional pressure. Earlier generations had fewer comforts but stronger human connections. Today, many have more gadgets but fewer relationships. A society survives not only on technology and economic growth, but also on families, shared responsibilities, and human bonds. The real concern is not declining birth rates, but declining human connection.
- As per market grapevine, after the rise in LTCG tax to 12.5%, STCG tax to 20%, higher STT, removal of indexation benefits on debt funds, and taxation of SGB transactions in the secondary market, concerns have grown regarding the attractiveness of Indian financial markets. Many believe lower transaction and capital gains taxes could help attract greater participation from FIIs, FPIs, and NRIs, especially amid global competition for capital.
- Why is the Rupee under pressure? India is gradually facing not just a trade deficit challenge but also a capital account challenge. The Iran conflict may be a trigger, but not the root cause. Net FDI inflows have weakened as Indian companies increasingly invest overseas. Currency strength depends not only on GDP growth but also on sustainable capital inflows, productive investments, and investor confidence. When long-term capital inflows slow, reliance on volatile portfolio flows rises, increasing external vulnerability. The key question remains: if India is among the fastest-growing major economies, why is domestic capital increasingly seeking opportunities abroad?
- Top fund managers remain divided on Indian IT. Rajeev Thakkar and S. Naren see value at current levels and continue to invest in the sector. Prashant Jain remains neutral, awaiting greater clarity over the next couple of years. Kenneth Andrade has exited the sector due to uncertainty surrounding AI’s long-term impact, while Samir Arora has no allocation to traditional IT but prefers select technology plays. Sunil Singhania is also avoiding traditional IT while selectively investing in product-based technology businesses. The differing views highlight the uncertainty and opportunity within the sector.
