Season 2, Episode 57 | 2026-06-10

Banks Roared, Crude Cracked. Sensex Expiry Is A Pin

For two sessions India stood inside a burning building and would not flinch. Monday a global rout still left us down barely one percent. Tuesday the fire alarm switched off mid-morning, and the banks came through the smoke like the cavalry.

Cold Open | Two Sessions Inside A Burning Building

A very good morning, guys. For two sessions this market stood inside a burning building and refused to flinch. Monday the world was on fire and we still closed down barely one percent. Yesterday the fire alarm switched off mid-morning, and the banks came charging through the smoke like the cavalry. This is The Tanmay Edge, episode 57.

Scorecard | EP56 Graded 2 Of 5

Yesterday's episode 56 graded 2 out of 5. I called a quiet, pinned expiry around 23000 to 23200 and a sell the rise tape. The market broke the cap and closed above it instead. The one call that paid was the escape hatch. I said if we clear 23200 the squeeze fuel lights up, and it cleared. Full scorecard on rupeecase.com.

The Tape | A 138 Point V Shape Off The Low

Tuesday opened soft at 23259, then slid all the way to 23104 by late morning. And then the banks woke up. Nifty closed 23242, up 119 points, a 138 point V shape straight off the low. Sensex closed 73919, up 394. The real fireworks were under the surface. The bank index jumped over two percent, the public sector bank pack ripped 3.62 percent, SBI up two, ICICI up two, Axis near two, Bajaj Finance near two. Realty up 1.6, auto up 1.3, and IT the lone red name down half a percent. India VIX collapsed 8.5 percent to 15.58, one of the lowest readings of the year.

Why The Banks Caught Fire | One Word, Oil

Why did the banks catch fire? One word. Oil. Overnight the two sides in the Middle East held their ceasefire, the missiles stayed grounded, and the market believed it. Crude that spiked toward 96 dollars a week ago fell off a cliff, Brent near 92.5, the American grade near 89. Here is the chain that matters. Cheaper oil means a smaller import bill, a smaller bill means a stronger rupee, and the rupee firmed to about 95 and a third. A firmer rupee and cooler inflation means more room for rate cuts, and nothing loves the smell of a rate cut like a bank. Gold, the bunker trade, fell to about 4186…

The Standoff | The Foreign Desk Did Not Blink

Here is the twist, and it is the whole episode. Through that entire rally the foreign institutions held their short almost untouched, still 277000 contracts net short in index futures, the heaviest of the whole fall. They covered almost nothing, and sold another 4566 crore of cash on top. Stack the desks. The proprietary desk, the sharpest money, sits net long futures and long options both ways, long gamma, paid whichever way it moves. The client is long 204000 futures and has written a mountain of puts, fine while support holds, trapped if it breaks. And the foreign desk is short, short, shor…

Nifty Levels | 23200 Is The Line

On the fresh weekly options that just listed, 23200 is the line, and it is not close. About 45 lakh put contracts sit at 23200 against about 35 lakh calls, more open interest than any strike on the board. It is the magnet and the battle line at once. Above it the options math turns supportive around 23350, the gamma flip, above which dealer hedging calms the move and below which it amplifies. Above 23350 the path opens to 23400 and then the real ceiling at 23500, where over 40 lakh call contracts sit. Lose 23200 and 23000 comes quickly, where 35 lakh puts are parked. The put to call ratio sits…

Sensex Expiry | 74000 Is The Pin

The event everyone needs to mark is not Nifty. Tomorrow is Sensex weekly expiry, so today is one day to go, and the chain is screaming pin. The magnet is 74000, the single strike holding the most call open interest and the most put open interest on the entire board, over 11 lakh contracts each, a double loaded magnet. Above, 74500 is the ceiling. Below, 73500 is the cushion. The at the money straddle, the market's own expected move, is about 730 points for the expiry, and implied volatility got crushed nearly 19 percent to around 15. With volatility this crushed and 74000 this heavily loaded, …

Education And Risk | Sell The Calm, Mind The World

On the day before expiry, with volatility already crushed and one strike loaded on both sides, buying options is the trap. The clock and the falling volatility bleed you even if you pick the direction right. The cleaner trade is to sell the premium into the magnet, let the pin do the work, and only switch to buying on a clean, decisive break away from 74000. Sell the calm, do not buy it. The honest risk is real. Wall Street closed lower, the Nasdaq fell nearly one percent, Asia is red with Korea down almost three and Japan down one, and our pre market is only barely green near 23270. India is …

Highlights

Transcript Excerpt

A very good morning guys. For two sessions the market stood inside a burning building and refused to flinch. Monday the world was on fire and we still closed down barely 1%. Yesterday the fire alarm switched off mid-morning and the banks came charging through the smoke like the cavalry. This is The Tanmay Edge. You are listening to episode 57. I am Tanmay Kurtkoti. Let's go. Quick scorecard before we proceed. Yesterday's episode 56 graded 2 out of 5. I called a quiet, pinned expiry around 23,200 and a sell-the-rise tape. The market broke the cap and closed above it instead. The one call that paid was the escape hatch: I said if it clears 23,200 the squeeze fuel lights up, and it cleared. Full scorecard is available on rupeecase.com. Now let's move on to today's tape, because the numbers tell the whole story. Tuesday opened soft at 23,259, then slid all the way to 23,104 by late morning, and then the banks woke up. Nifty closed 23,242, up 120 points, up half a percent, a 138-point V-shape straight off the low. Sensex closed 73,919, up 394 points. But the real fireworks were under the surface. The bank index jumped over two percent, the PSU banks ripped three point six percent, State Bank up two, ICICI up two, Axis nearly two, Bajaj Finance up two. Realty was up 1.6, auto 1.3. The only thing in red was IT, half a percent down. And the fear gauge, India VIX, collapsed eight and a half percent to 15.58, the lowest we have seen in recent times. So why did the banks catch fire? One word. Oil. Overnight the two sides in the Middle East held a ceasefire, the missiles stayed grounded, and the market believed it. Crude that spiked towards $96 a week ago went off the cliff. Brent is near $92.5 this morning, the American grade near $89. And here is the chain that matters for us. Cheaper oil means a smaller import bill, a smaller bill means a stronger rupee, and the rupee firmed to about 95 and a third. A firmer rupee and cooler inflation means more room for rate cuts, and nothi…

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