Indian Markets Post-Market Report – 3 December 2025 -A Flat Finish on a Cautious Day.
📌 Market Wrap – A Quiet Close After a Choppy Day
Indian Markets Post-Market report is about The market spent most of Wednesday trying to find its footing. After a shaky start and a few half-hearted rebounds, both benchmarks settled almost where they began.
The tone was cautious, the moves were narrow, and traders kept one eye on the rupee and the other on the RBI policy meet around the corner.
Nifty 50:25,986 (–46 points, –0.18%)
Sensex: 85,106.81 (–31 points, –0.04%)
Bank Nifty: 59,348 (+74 points, +0.13%)
Midcaps and smallcaps had a tougher day — breadth was weak, and many stocks slipped quietly even as the headline indices looked calm.
🧭 What Drove the Session
Two things shaped the mood today:
The rupee weakening past ₹90 again, which kept import-heavy sectors on the back foot.
RBI policy expectations, with the street preparing for a no-surprise outcome but still reluctant to take fresh positions.
Most traders chose to stay light and wait it out, which explains the narrow range and hesitant attempt at recovery.
📊 Index Behaviour – Nifty, Sensex & Bank Nifty
Nifty 50
Nifty floated between 25,891 on the lower side and a brief bounce above 26,050, but selling returned near that zone. The index simply lacked the force to reclaim yesterday’s levels.
Support around 25,875–25,900 held again.
Resistance remains tight near 26,050–26,100.
Sensex
Sensex followed the same script. It dipped early, stabilised around 84,750, and crawled back through the afternoon. Private banks and IT helped soften the blow, even as PSU names and metals stayed weak.
Bank Nifty
Bank Nifty looked comparatively better. It recovered from sub-59,000 levels and ended modestly higher.
ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank provided most of the lift, and the index now has respectable support in the 58,900–59,000 region.
📈 Sector View – IT Shines, PSU Banks Struggle
It was one of those days where sector moves told the story better than the main indices:
IT stocks were comfortably in the green. The softer rupee helped, and names like TCS, Infosys, Wipro attracted steady institutional buying. Private banks also saw decent support, helping Bank Nifty stay afloat.
On the other hand, PSU banks were hit hard. Many of them slipped between 2–3% as traders locked in recent gains.
Consumption, auto, metals and energy also closed with mild cuts. Market breadth stayed negative for most of the session, which means the day was quietly weak even if the indices tried to hide it.
🔺 Top Gainers – Nifty 50
1.Wipro – led the chart with a firm ~1.81% gain
2.Hindalco ~1.17%
3.TCS ~1.41%
4.ICICI Bank ~1.35%
5.Infosys~1.13%
IT and large private banks formed the backbone of whatever stability the market managed to hold.
🔻 Top Losers – Nifty 50
1.Max Healthcare – fell the most ~ -2.81%
2.Tata Consumer Products ~ -1.91%
3.Adani Enterprises ~ -2.22%
4.BEL ~ -2.20%
5.Shriram Finance~ -1.81%
Most of these declines were part of sector-wide pressure rather than any single headline.
📉 Indian Markets Post – Market Report – Support & Resistance Levels
🔵 Nifty 50
Support: 25,875–25,900, then 25,750
Resistance: 26,050–26,100, and stronger supply near 26,300
🏦 Bank Nifty
Support: 58,900–59,000
Resistance: 59,500 and then 59,800–60,000
🔴 Sensex
Support: 84,700–84,500
Resistance: 85,400–85,700
The index action suggests another day or two of sideways drift unless a macro catalyst appears.
💱 Currency & Macro – The Rupee Remains the Story
The rupee closing near ₹90.19/USD has become the market’s biggest talking point.
A currency sitting at record lows can:
inflate import bills, squeeze companies dependent on foreign inputs, and make FIIs more cautious.
But there’s a flip side too — IT and pharma benefit, which we saw clearly today.
🧊 India VIX – What Volatility Says
India VIX hovering close to 11 paints a picture of quiet markets.
Low VIX usually means:
option premiums drop, traders expect fewer large swings, and the market may drift unless news breaks.
Combine that with weak breadth, and we get a typical pre-policy, low-energy session.
📦 IPO Corner – Strong Participation Continues
The IPO lane remained busy with three notable issues seeing strong demand across segments:
Aequs Vidya Wires Meesho
Subscription numbers continued to build through the day, and the retail + HNI appetite suggests listing expectations remain healthy.
Even in a steady market, IPO enthusiasm hasn’t faded.
💸 FII & DII Flow Check
Official numbers for 3 December:
FII: net sellers ~ -₹3,206.92 Crores
DII: net buyers ~ -₹4,730.41 Crores
This tug-of-war continues to keep the market afloat even when global cues and currency trends stay uncertain.
🌐 Global Commodity & Currency Snapshot
🪙 Precious Metals (Gold, Silver etc.)
Gold: ₹1,27,719 per 10 grams.
Silver : ₹1,77,818 per kg.
🛢 Crude Oil
Global benchmark crude (WTI/Brent) recently trades around USD 59–63/barrel.
⭐ Stock of the Day – Wipro
Wipro earns this spot simply because:
it was the top gainer, the weak rupee made IT more attractive today, and the stock showed clean institutional buying, not just a technical bounce.
Its move fits neatly with the broader IT theme of the day.
🧭 Investment View – Short & Long Term
Short-Term (Next few sessions)
The market looks set for more sideways trade.
Nifty needs a firm close above 26,100 to break this short-term lethargy. Until then, traders will likely stick to stock-specific opportunities in IT, private banks, and defensives.
Long-Term (Multi-quarter)
India’s broader growth narrative remains healthy.
Corrections like these often turn into opportunities for disciplined, staggered investing across:
quality banks, IT leaders, pharma and healthcare, consumption names, selective industrials.
And with global uncertainty still around, a small allocation to gold remains a reasonable hedge.
Further reading 👇
Indian Markets Pre-Market Report-Dec 3, 2025
INDIAN MARKETS MONTHLY VIEW-Dec 2025
“HRITIK Stocks Q2 Key Results ; Insights”
Q2 FY26 Update: Hindalco, Bajaj Auto, L&T, Airtel|kartalks
⚠️Disclaimer:
This report is created purely for information and educational use. It is not investment advice, not a recommendation, and not a research report. Market levels, prices, flows, and sector commentary are based on publicly available data as of 3 December 2025 and may change without notice. Trading and investing carry market risk, including potential capital loss. Please consult a SEBI-registered investment adviser before making financial decisions based on this or any other market commentary.

