
New Delhi, March 25, 2026: The GIFT Nifty, a key early indicator of the Indian equity market’s performance, witnessed a significant surge on Wednesday morning, jumping nearly 1% in early trade. This positive momentum comes as global investors breathe a collective sigh of relief following signals of potential de-escalation in the Middle East, coupled with a buoyant performance in international markets.
At approximately 7:00 AM IST on March 25, 2026, the GIFT Nifty was trading around the 23,160 mark, up by roughly 215 points. This early spike suggests a gap-up opening for the benchmark Nifty 50 and BSE Sensex, extending the recovery seen in the previous session.
The primary driver behind this sudden risk-on sentiment is the cooling of geopolitical friction between the United States, Israel, and Iran. After weeks of escalating tensions that threatened global energy supplies, several diplomatic developments have provided a much-needed “geopolitical pause”:
For a major oil-importing nation like India, the easing of Middle East tensions is a direct macro-economic boost. Brent crude prices, which had recently spiked above $100 per barrel, saw a sharp correction, dropping toward the $97 mark. Lower crude prices help ease India’s trade deficit, cool inflationary pressures, and improve the profit margins of sectors like aviation, paints, and chemicals.
The positive sentiment in GIFT Nifty is also a reflection of a broader rally in global markets.
Following a period of intense volatility where the Nifty 50 had corrected nearly 9% from its peaks, today’s early trade indicators suggest that the “bottoming out” process may have begun.
| Factor | Current Trend | Impact on Indian Stocks |
| Crude Oil | Falling | Positive for Paints, Auto, and FMCG |
| GIFT Nifty | Up 1% | Strong Gap-up Opening Expected |
| FII Activity | Heavy Selling | Cautious (FIIs sold over ₹10,000 crore on Mar 20) |
| Market VIX | Declining | Lower Volatility, Higher Stability |
While the immediate relief rally is welcome, analysts advise a degree of caution. “The market was deeply oversold on geopolitical panic, and what we are seeing is a sharp short-covering rally,” noted a senior market strategist. “However, the underlying conflict remains fluid. Investors should focus on quality large-cap stocks with strong balance sheets that can weather any potential return of volatility.”