On Wednesday, October 1, Indian equity benchmark indices closed higher, posting their strongest intraday gains since August 18. Both the Nifty and the Sensex snapped an eight-day losing streak as the RBI’s monetary policy announcement lifted market sentiment and provided relief from bearish pressure. India’s fear index, India VIX, slipped over 7% below the 11 mark.
At the close, the Nifty 50 advanced 243.15 points, or 0.99%, to settle at 24,836.30, while the Sensex climbed 715.70 points, or 0.89%, to end at 80,983.31.
Gains were led by financial stocks after the RBI kept policy rates unchanged in line with market expectations and announced relaxations in acquisition and lending rules. The RBI raised FY26 GDP growth to 6.8% while lowering CPI inflation to 2.6%, citing easing price pressures.
On the sectoral front, 10 out of 11 major sectors closed in the green. Financials were the show-stopper for the day, with the Nifty Financial Services index rising 1.38%, making it the second-best performing sector of the day. Bank Nifty also surged 1.3%, marking its sharpest intraday rise since June 6.
Meanwhile, broader markets joined the uptrend, with both the Nifty Midcap and Nifty Smallcap indices ending the session on a positive note, strengthening overall market breadth.
Among individual stocks,
The Nifty Media index surged 3.97%, recording its highest intraday gains since 23 June, with 8 out of 10 constituents ending in positive territory. On the flip side, the Nifty PSU Bank index declined by 0.37% snapping a 2-day rally.
The key drivers of the index gains were:
On the other hand, these stocks weighed on the index:
The broader market indices ended on a positive note on Wednesday. The Mid-cap 100 index ended up by 0.89%, and the Small-cap 100 closed up by 1.10%, recording the sharpest intraday gains since September 1.
As of October 1, 2025, the market breadth was in favour of advancing stocks. Out of 3,158 stocks traded on the NSE, 2,199 advanced, 874 declined, and 85 remained unchanged.
A total of 68 stocks touched their 52-week highs, while 74 hit their 52-week lows. Additionally, 117 stocks were locked in their upper circuits, whereas 56 stocks were in lower circuits.
Disclaimer: The article is for informational purposes only and not investment advice.