Business
Nifty Prediction For Monday: US-Venezuela Tensions Add To Equation; Know Resistance & Support Levels
Last Updated:
Nifty Prediction For Monday, January 5: Indian equity markets head into Monday’s session riding strong momentum, but with a fresh global risk factor now entering the equation.
Nifty Prediction For Monday, January 5.
Indian equity markets are approaching Monday’s session riding strong momentum, but with a fresh global risk factor now entering the equation. Reports of US military strikes on Venezuela have introduced geopolitical uncertainty. The key question for investors now is whether this development disrupts the ongoing rally or remains a short-lived global headline risk.
Where the market stands after last week
Benchmark indices ended the previous week at record highs, extending gains for the second consecutive week. The Nifty50 closed at 26,328.55, while the Sensex settled at 85,762, supported by strong banking performance, resilient broader markets, and optimism around domestic growth. Bank Nifty surged past the psychological 60,000 mark, while midcap and smallcap indices continued to show healthy participation.
The rally was driven by a mix of technical breakouts, positive banking updates, easing foreign selling pressure, and improving domestic macro cues such as industrial production. However, foreign institutional investors remained net sellers, even as domestic institutions continued to cushion the downside.
How US-Venezuela tensions could matter
The US action against Venezuela adds a geopolitical risk premium, particularly through the energy channel. Venezuela is a key crude producer, and any escalation could firm up oil prices. For India, higher crude prices typically translate into concerns around inflation, fiscal math, and the rupee — factors that can temper equity sentiment, at least in the short term.
According to a market expert, “Markets globally have recently shown a tendency to absorb geopolitical shocks unless they threaten energy supplies materially or trigger sustained risk-off flows. The initial reaction on Monday is therefore likely to be cautious rather than panicky, with volatility picking up in early trade.”
Technical outlook for Nifty
According to technical analysts, the technical structure of the Nifty remains strong.
- Immediate support: 26,000
- Stronger support zone: 25,900-25,700
- Near-term resistance: 26,500
- Higher upside targets: 26,750-27,000 (on sustained breakout)
“A healthy retest of the recent breakout zone around 26200–26150 could offer a favourable buying opportunity. As long as its trading above 25900 support, the outlook remains positive. Immediate resistance is placed near 26500, and a sustained breakout could propel the index toward 26750. A buy-on-dips strategy remains appropriate for the coming week,” said Ravi Singh, chief research officer from Master Capital Services.
Bank Nifty: key levels to watch
Bank Nifty remains the market’s leadership index, having broken out after nearly a month of consolidation.
- Immediate support: 59,700-59,800
- Major support: 59,300
- Resistance zone: 60,500-60,600
- Upside potential: 61,000 and above on breakout
PSU banks continue to show relative strength, while select private banks have lagged, keeping the index in a sideways-to-positive bias.
Strategy for Monday
Given the strong domestic setup but rising global uncertainty, a buy-on-dips approach appears prudent rather than aggressive chasing at record highs. Traders should be prepared for intraday volatility linked to global cues, particularly crude oil price movements and overnight US market reaction to the Venezuela developments, according to analysts.
“The coming week is expected to be data-heavy, both domestically and globally, as markets enter the early phase of the earnings season. In India, investors will track the final readings of the HSBC Services PMI and Composite PMI, followed by FY GDP growth data. Bank loan growth, deposit growth, and foreign exchange reserves data will offer insights into credit demand and liquidity conditions. Globally, key US macro data and releases from China will be closely watched for signals on growth, demand, and inflation trends,” said Ajit Mishra, senior vice-president (research) of Religare Broking.
Disclaimer:Disclaimer: The views and investment tips shared in this article are for general information purposes only. Readers are advised to consult a certified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
January 03, 2026, 14:33 IST
Read More
Business
The FAA wants gamers to apply for air traffic control jobs
A new government ad campaign is trying to persuade gamers to apply for air safety roles.
Source link
Business
Airports warn of ‘systemic’ jet fuel shortage if Strait of Hormuz stays closed
A trade body for European airports has warned over a “systemic” shortage of jet fuel ahead of the peak summer season if the Strait of Hormuz does not reopen in the weeks ahead.
Airports Council International (ACI), which represents more than 600 airports, wrote a letter to the European commissioners for energy and transport and tourism.
The body’s director-general Olivier Jankovec wrote in the letter: “At this stage, we understand that if the passage through the Strait of Hormuz does not resume in any significant and stable way within the next three weeks, systemic jet fuel shortage is set to become a reality for the EU.
“The fact that we are entering the peak summer season… is only adding to those concerns.”
Supplies of jet fuel – which is used to fly planes – from the Middle East have been disrupted since the US-Israel’s war with Iran because of Iran’s effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical international shipping route.
This has led to soaring prices and warnings that flights could be affected because of Europe’s reliance on fuel imports from around the world.
Analysts have also said higher jet fuel prices can be quicker to pass through to airfares than road fuel and household energy costs.
Ryanair’s boss Michael O’Leary said earlier this month that if the war continues, then there was a risk of “disruptions in Europe in May and June”, adding that “maybe 10%, 20%, 25% of our supplies might be at risk”.
Sir Keir Starmer has been visiting allies in the Gulf for talks on how to support what he described as a “fragile” ceasefire between the US and Iran, which was agreed this week.
He spoke to US President Donald Trump about the need for a “practical plan” to get shipping going through the Strait of Hormuz amid suggestions Tehran wants to charge vessels for passage.
In its letter, the ACI says jet fuel supply for the next six months needs to be urgently monitored by the European Commission, including identifying action that can be taken to increase production within the EU.
It also asks them to consider temporarily lifting restrictions and regulations that limit the ability to import jet fuel.
“This crisis has exposed the reduced refining capacity of the EU for jet fuel production, and its acute dependence on imports from other world regions,” Mr Jankovec warned on behalf of the body.
Susannah Streeter, chief investment strategist for Wealth Club, said: “Carriers have had to deal with a more than doubling of fuel costs since the conflict erupted and the threat of shortages lingers.
“As the war has put a chokehold on supplies from the Middle East, it has caused other nations which produce jet fuel to impose export bans, causing trade to seize up further.
“It will take time to unwind panic positions, and for jet fuel prices to stabilise, so airlines are likely to continue to pass on the cost to passengers for the foreseeable future.”
Business
FTSE 100 flatlines ahead of Iran-US peace talks
The FTSE 100 closed little changed on Friday ahead of peace talks between the US and Iran this weekend.
“Investors remained cautious as they kept a close eye on developments surrounding the fragile ceasefire between the US, Israel and Iran,” said David Morrison, an analyst at Trade Nation, adding that investors were pausing “to catch their collective breath heading into the weekend”.
The FTSE 100 closed down just 2.95 points at 10,600.53. The FTSE 250 ended up 145.38 points, 0.7%, at 22,351.02, and the AIM All-Share rose 8.13 points, 1.1%, to 777.48.
For the week, the FTSE 100 was 2.3% higher, the FTSE 250 was up 3.1%, and the AIM All-Share climbed 5.3%.
US vice president JD Vance warned Iran not to “play” Washington but said he hoped peace talks set to start in Pakistan would have a “positive” outcome.
“If the Iranians are willing to negotiate in good faith, we’re certainly willing to extend the open hand. If they’re going to try to play us, then they’re going to find the negotiating team is not that receptive,” he said.
Washington and Tehran have agreed to a two-week truce after more than five weeks of war. However, they remain far apart in their public announcements of goals in the peace talks, in which Mr Vance will head the US delegation.
Key sticking points include Iran’s de facto control over the strategic Strait of Hormuz, US demands that Iran give up its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, and Iran’s aim to prevent further US and Israeli attacks.
For equity markets, Barclays analyst Emmanuel Cau thinks the path of least resistance remains higher.
“Having said that, we are hopeful but not naive,” Mr Cau said.
“Hostilities have not completely ceased and upcoming talks in Pakistan will be critical for further progress, which may not be a smooth process. And we note that stocks look somewhat more hopeful of a happy ending than oil, with equity indices now outperforming the pull-back seen in oil futures.”
Mr Cau added it also feels “reasonable” to expect that the oil shock will leave lasting scars on both growth and inflation relative to pre‑war expectations, in particular for Europe.
“So grinding higher may not be all plain sailing,” Mr Cau said.
Brent oil traded lower at 96.14 dollars a barrel on Friday afternoon, down from 97.36 dollars at the time of the equities close in London on Thursday.
In European equities on Friday, the CAC 40 in Paris closed up 0.4%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt rose 0.3%.
In New York, markets were mixed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.2%, while the S&P 500 was 0.3% higher, and the Nasdaq Composite was up 0.8%.
The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was flat at 4.30% on Friday. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury stretched to 4.90% on Friday from 4.89% on Thursday.
Investors were also weighing US inflation figures, which showed the impact of the Middle East crisis.
Data published by the US Bureau of Labour Statistics on Friday showed the US consumer price index inflation rate accelerated to 3.3% in March, in line with the FXStreet-cited consensus, from 2.4% in February.
The index for energy rose 10.9% in March, the largest monthly increase in the index since September 2005.
The petrol index increased 21.2% over the month, the largest monthly increase since the series was first published in 1967, which accounted for nearly three-quarters of the monthly all-items increase.
Core inflation, excluding food and energy, was up 2.6% on-year in March, higher than 2.5% in February, but below the consensus of 2.7%.
Analysts took encouragement from the softer-than-expected core inflation figure.
“Gasoline price hikes prompted a jump in headline inflation, but core pressures were more benign than feared. We have much greater confidence that inflation will be transitory this time around, given the lack of demand impetus and weaker corporate pricing power versus 2022,” analysts at ING said.
Arielle Ingrassia, associate director at wealth manager Evelyn Partners, agreed: “For now, this looks like an energy-led reacceleration with contained spillovers, rather than a fully entrenched second-round inflation dynamic.
“However, if energy prices remain elevated, the risk is that these effects broaden over time through costs, pricing and ultimately inflation expectations.”
The pound rose to 1.3472 dollars on Friday afternoon from 1.3437 dollars on Thursday. Against the euro, sterling ebbed to 1.1482 euros from 1.1484 euros.
The euro stood higher against the greenback at 1.1735 dollars from 1.1705 dollars. Against the yen, the dollar was trading higher at 159.10 yen compared to 158.97 yen.
On London’s FTSE 100, Convatec led the risers, up 4.5%, after Thursday’s capital markets day.
Panmure Liberum said there was a “palpable sense of confidence” at what it called an “impressive” CMD. Goldman Sachs, meanwhile, said it came away from the CMD with a “broadly positive impression and increased confidence” in medium-term financial targets.
Burberry rose 2.1% after Italian peer Brunello Cucinelli reported stronger-than-expected first-quarter results, while a higher copper price gave Antofagasta, up 3.0%, a boost ahead of next week’s production figures.
Oil majors BP and Shell, down 1.1% and 0.8% respectively, were on the back foot amid the easing oil price, while hopes for peace in the Middle East and Ukraine sent defence manufacturers BAE Systems and Babcock International down 3.3% and 1.8%.
On the FTSE 250, AO World jumped 7.0% as it forecast profit in line with previously upgraded guidance, “despite material cost headwinds”.
But B&M European Value Retail fell 4.6%, after it said interim chief financial officer Helen Cowing has stepped down from her role, having only held the position since December 1.
Cowing, formerly interim CFO at Mobico Group, had replaced Mike Schmidt, who stepped down in the wake of an accounting error.
The company said group financial controller Peter Waterhouse has been appointed as interim CFO with immediate effect.
JPMorgan analyst Borja Olcese noted that Waterhouse will be B&M’s third CFO in three years, after a chief executive change last year as well.
“This sequence of key management change needs to be regarded in the context of several profit warnings (three material cuts to FY26 profit outlook in a matter of four months).
“Altogether, the sequence of events seems concerning to us, and suggests risk of further kitchen sinking – we note weak company fundamentals persist,” the analyst added.
Gold traded at 4,775.63 dollars an ounce on Friday, down from 4,791.50 dollars at the same time on Thursday.
The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Convatec, up 10.0p at 234.0p, Endeavour Mining, up 146.0p at 4,902.0p, Antofagasta, up 111.0p at 3,788.0p, Kingfisher, up 8.1p at 308.2p and Burberry, up 24.0p at 1,157.4p.
The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Metlen Energy & Metals, down 3.1p at 32.2p, BAE Systems, down 75.0p at 2,194.0p, Sage Group, down 18.2p at 817.6p, Hiscox, down 30.0p at 1,577.0p and Compass, down 0.5p at 27.5p.
Monday’s global economic calendar has the US existing home sales figures.
Monday’s domestic corporate calendar has a trading statement from London-based money transfer services provider, Wise.
Contributed by Alliance News
-
Business1 week agoJaguar Land Rover sees sales recover after cyber attack
-
Uncategorized1 week ago
[CinePlex360] Please moderate: “Trump signals p
-
Entertainment1 week agoJoe Jonas shares candid glimpse into parenthood with Sophie Turner
-
Tech1 week agoOur Favorite iPad Is $50 Off
-
Sports1 week agoUConn Final Four run could trigger a $50M furniture giveaway for Massachusetts-based Jordan’s Furniture
-
Business1 week agoVideo: Why Is the Labor Market Stuck?
-
Entertainment1 week agoBlake Lively reacts to harassment claims dismissal against Justin Baldoni
-
Politics1 week agoIran can sustain Strait of Hormuz closure for years, will cut US military logistics: Official
