The sustained upswing in equity markets for the fifth consecutive day on 
Tuesday may not last long going by trends in the futures market. The 30-share 
Sensex of the BSE rose 293.44 points, or 2.84%, to close at 10,631.12 points. 
The S&P CNX Nifty of the NSE gained 98.25 points, or 3.2%, to close at 3,142.10 
points. Interest rate-sensitive companies saw sustained positive movement. In a 
week, the Sensex has gained 18.01%. 

But this rise is a result of investors building positions in the futures 
market, known as 'open interest', on expectations that markets would dip 
further. Open interest, technically, is the total number of outstanding 
contracts that are held by market participants at the end of the day. It can 
also be defined as the total number of futures contracts or option contracts 
that have not yet been exercised (squared off), expired or fulfilled by 
delivery. 

Open interest has deepened through October. Higher the positions, lower the 
Nifty swing. But most of these positions have been liquidated in the past few 
days. To do that, bear operators have had to buy shares from spot markets to 
cover their positions, a process known as 'short covering'. 

On Monday and Tuesday, open interest was at 3.1-crore levels, of which only a 
small number was carried forward. Of the 28.5-lakh shares added to open 
interest on Monday, only 6.5 lakh shares were carried forward. Derivative 
analyst Arup Misra at Elara Capital is convinced this is a bear market rally. 
"There is not much cash buying and there is no strength in the rally." Upswings 
with low volumes also indicate that the rally is weak. 

As a result, key index heavyweights such as RIL, SBI, Bharti, L&T and DLF were 
up on short covering rather than a build-up of long positions. The fact that 
the put-call ratio-the amount of sell option contracts against buy contracts-is 
around 1.10 indicates that more people were taking positions on expectations 
that the market would correct. And this happened since October 31. Before that, 
the put-call ratio was below 1. "Also, a lot of arbitrage positions in the 
short end of the market were unwound," says TS Harihar, senior VP, ICICI 
Securities. 

However, he does not see a major sell-off at the moment. There is some section 
holding on to cash positions and this is a positive. Plus some amount of FII 
net purchases helps, he said. "There will definitely be a correction, and the 
rebound from this correction will tell us if we have turned around or not," 
Harihar says. 

In the correction, if the Sensex closes above the previous low and then rallies 
to close over the 10,500-mark, there could be what technical analysts call a 
'higher bottom and higher top' formation, signalling a turnaround. 

With the manufacturing sector in the US turning up weak numbers, Asian markets 
could weaken in the latter half of the week. That would be a dampener for 
India, too, despite optimism in the market stemming from the fact that FIIs 
have started net buying again. 

According to Sebi, FIIs were net purchasers in the Indian equity markets for 
the third consecutive day. On Tuesday, they were net purchasers to the extent 
of Rs 761.70 crore, or $188.80 million. On Monday, they were net purchasers of 
Rs 1183.20 crore, or $293.30 million

http://www.financialexpress.com/news/f&o-trends-indicate-market-upswing-is-driven-by-bears/381621/
"All you need is ignorance and confidence; then success is sure."








 
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