Expectations seemed too high going into the Budget and there has been a sharp correction in the last few sessions. Retail traders and domestic operators seem to have exited, there has been some foreign institutional investor (FII) selling and domestic institutions continue to be cautious.
As a result, the market has hit its lowest point in five weeks. The Nifty is testing support at 7,450 - this is a pullback of five per cent in three sessions. Small-caps and midcaps have lost more ground due to the switch in retail sentiment.
The long-term trend would still be reckoned up but the intermediate trend is down. The short-term trend looks weak, given poor advance-decline ratios and a fall on high volumes. There could be relief rallies from this point.
One rule of thumb could help guide traders about potentially serious change in sentiment. The market was at 7,200 levels before election results on May 16. A fall below that would mean sentiment had got seriously worse. On the upside, the all-time of 7,808 was hit just before the Budget and the market would have to beat that to confirm a bullish trend.
The monsoon failure could be an inflationary factor while fighting in Iraq remains a potential threat to global crude oil supplies. But there was good news on the macroeconomic front. The May Index of Industrial Production was quite positive, beating expectations. Inflation in June was lower across both the consumer price index and wholesale price index.
That lower inflation may help trigger a rally in Bank Nifty which has lost a lot of ground. But monsoon does mean fears on food inflation. The information technology (IT) index could play its part as a defensive hedge if there is heavy FII selling and, hence, a strong dollar. In other sectors, one would have to wait for the Budget to be fully discounted.