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What do Nifty’s two back-to-back gap downs of over 1% mean for investors? Let history explain

Byadmin

Mar 6, 2026


Sharp back-to-back declines in the Nifty 50 may be more than just a short-term scare. Historical patterns suggest such movement often signals deeper stress in the market and rarely leads to an immediate rebound, according to an analysis by SAMCO Securities.

Raj Gaikar, Research Analyst at SAMCO Securities, pointed to a specific market pattern. It occurs when the Nifty 50 opens with a gap down of more than 1% on two consecutive trading sessions. “Markets have a language. Sometimes, they repeat a sentence loud enough for investors to pay attention,” he added.

The logic behind tracking this setup is straightforward. Two sharp gap-down openings in a row often indicate that something meaningful has gone wrong globally or economically. In such situations, expecting a swift recovery is ‘wishful thinking rather than a sound strategy’.

Historical data since the inception of the Nifty 50 shows eight such instances before the latest event. These episodes coincided with periods of global stress, including the European debt crisis in 2011, the COVID-led market crash in March 2020 and the rate-hike and Russia-Ukraine related selloffs in 2022.

On March 4, 2026, markets saw the ninth occurrence of this pattern, spooked by rising geopolitical tensions. US‑Israel strikes on Iran, the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and fears of disruption in the Strait of Hormuz pushed crude oil prices higher, rattling global equities and sparking broad market volatility.

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Data suggests that the market typically struggles to recover quickly after such signals. Across the eight historical events, forward returns over the next three to five trading sessions were negative on average. Even after excluding the extreme volatility of the March 2020 COVID crash, markets generally continued to drift lower or move sideways.

“A quick V-shaped recovery rarely appeared in such circumstances,” Gaikar said. According to the note, consecutive gap downs of this scale often reflect institutional investors cutting exposure rather than merely shifting money between sectors.

The current macro backdrop also shows several pressure points. Foreign Portfolio Investors have remained consistent sellers, India VIX has climbed above 20, and the rupee is under pressure. Brent crude has also been rising amid fears of supply disruptions. At the same time, the Bank of Japan’s recent rate hike has tightened global liquidity conditions.

“These are structural pressures that typically take time to stabilise,” Gaikar said. The pattern itself should not be interpreted as a buying signal, the note cautioned. “Two consecutive gap downs of more than 1% are not a buying signal. They are the market’s way of indicating that the ground beneath has shifted,” Gaikar said.

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The takeaway for investors is to stay disciplined rather than rush to buy the first dip. “Avoid panic, but also avoid aggressive bottom-fishing,” Gaikar said, adding that respecting stop-loss levels and waiting for clearer signals may be the more effective approach.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

By admin