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What’s nifty view for tomorrow

Asked by CNI Follower · 3 months ago · 25-11-2025

Nifty view for tomorrow (26 November 2025) can be framed only in broad, conditional terms; live levels and today’s closing data are not accessible here, so this is a generic trading framework, not a real‑time call.

Use the following structured approach for tomorrow:

1. Primary bias

- Treat the ongoing trend (last few days’ direction on daily chart) as your core bias.

- If Nifty has been closing above 20‑DMA and 50‑DMA with higher highs and higher lows (on daily), keep a buy‑on‑dips mindset.

- If it is trading below 20‑DMA and 50‑DMA with lower highs and lower lows, treat it as a sell‑on‑rise market.

2. Key intraday reference zones (examples)

- Identify:

- Yesterday’s high/low

- Previous swing high/swing low on hourly chart

- VWAP zones and gap areas (if any)

- Trade around these zones instead of making a blind directional bet for the whole day.

3. Plan for both scenarios

Bullish continuation case (example framework):

- Price opens flat/positive above yesterday’s close and holds above VWAP for first 30–45 minutes.

- Dips towards prior support (yesterday’s low or nearby demand zone) get bought with strong volumes.

- Strategy:

- Intraday long on dips near support with stop just below that support.

- Book partial profits near known resistance (yesterday’s high / previous swing top).

Bearish / corrective case (example framework):

- Price opens flat/negative and stays below VWAP for first 30–45 minutes.

- Any intraday bounce towards resistance (yesterday’s high / strong supply zone) gets sold into.

- Strategy:

- Intraday short on rise towards resistance with stop slightly above that resistance.

- Cover partly near prior support / day’s low.

4. Volatility and risk

- Check India VIX:

- High VIX → wider stops, smaller position size.

- Low VIX → expect range‑bound, breakout failures more frequent; focus on buying support/selling resistance, not chasing breakouts.

- Avoid overnight index options trades purely on view; use defined‑risk strategies like vertical spreads if you must carry.

5. Options traders’ checklist for tomorrow

- Use Nifty straddles/strangles at nearest round strike to infer expected range (from total premium).

- Trending day: consider directional spreads (bull call / bear put) instead of naked options.

- Range day: consider short strangles/iron condors only if you understand margin and tail risk.

6. Risk management

- Decide maximum loss per day (for example, 1–2% of trading capital) and stop trading once hit.

- Do not average losers; re‑enter only if a fresh setup appears.

- Align intraday trades with the dominant higher‑timeframe trend (4H / daily).

This is an illustrative trading framework and not investment advice or a buy/sell recommendation on Nifty or any derivative. For tomorrow’s actionable view, combine this structure with live Nifty spot & futures levels, India VIX, global cues (US markets, GIFT Nifty), and today’s FII/DII data from your broker terminal or NSE.

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