Indian market soars nearly 4% as geopolitical tensions ease
The BSE Sensex jumped 2,975 points, or 3.7%, to close at 82,429.9. The NSE Nifty surged 916.7 points, or 3.8%, ending over 24,924. Both indices closed at their highest levels for the year, aided by the sharpest run-up in a day since February 2021.

All sectoral indices in India ended in the green, with metals, realty, power, IT, and energy stocks leading the charge, rising between 4% and 6%.
The BSE Sensex jumped 2,975 points, or 3.7%, to close at 82,429.9. The NSE Nifty surged 916.7 points, or 3.8%, ending over 24,924. Both indices closed at their highest levels for the year, aided by the sharpest run-up in a day since February 2021.
The rally boosted the market capitalisation of BSE-listed companies by ₹16.9 lakh crore.
Easing of hostilities on both fronts came as a significant reprieve for investors who have been on edge due to uncertainties over the outcome of geopolitical and economic conflicts in the past few weeks. While all Asian markets rallied after the US and China agreed to a 90-day pause on tariffs and slashed levies, Indian bourses got an extra fillip from the halt in fighting with Pakistan, forcing traders to liquidate bearish bets made late last week amid heightened tensions between the neighbours.

VIX Drops 15%
Pakistan's main share index soared 9% on Monday. "Today's (Monday's) market rally is a confluence of positive global and domestic developments - from easing geopolitical tensions between India and Pakistan, to progress on US-China trade talks," said Taher Badshah, chief investment officer at Invesco Mutual Fund.
The broader market also ended strong, with the Nifty Midcap 150 jumping 3.75% and the Nifty Small-Cap 250 gaining 4%. Of the 4,254 stocks traded on the BSE, 3,545 advanced, while 576 declined.
The bullish momentum may push the markets higher in the days ahead, but fund managers do not rule out intermittent sell-offs. "The market could see small doses of correction over the next few days after this massive rally," said Badshah. "But what has changed now is that it's now more of a buy-on-dips market, rather than a sell-on-rise market."
The Sensex and Nifty are up nearly 13% since April 7, when the recent rebound started after Trump halted tariffs on imports from most countries, barring China, for 90 days.
All sectoral indices in India ended in the green, with metals, realty, power, IT, and energy stocks leading the charge, rising between 4% and 6%.
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