Market snapshot
- Date: February 17, 2026 (pre-market)
- Index: Nifty 50 posted a near 1% gain — its largest single-day rise since Feb. 3
- Market context: Options expiry for the Nifty 50 is scheduled this week, increasing near-term positioning flows
- Regional factor: Several Asian markets remain closed for Lunar New Year holidays
Key themes
Earnings season in India is starting to show signs of recovery for corporate profits and revenue growth. For risk-on investors, this cycle can provide fresh fundamental reasons to re-assess exposure to beaten-down growth names, including those in AI-related sectors (watch tickers: AI, AM). A clear, data-driven earnings beat across multiple sectors would be a direct lifeline for bulls who have been scarred by earlier AI-driven re-ratings.
Quotable: "A broad-based earnings recovery would materially improve the risk-reward for equities, especially ahead of options expiry-driven positioning."
Softer US inflation has pushed 10-year Treasury yields lower, which has revived market hopes for a Federal Reserve rate cut later in the cycle. Lower global yields typically improve the valuation backdrop for emerging market equities by reducing discount rates and lowering funding costs. Traders should track real-time moves in the 10-year Treasury yield as a leading indicator for cross-border equity flows.
Despite improving earnings, India faces a widening current-account deficit. The expansion is being driven by two observable trends: surging gold imports and relatively weaker exports to the US. Higher gold imports increase demand for foreign exchange and can pressure the rupee, while weak exports to a key trading partner limit external receipts, widening the deficit.
Quotable: "A widening current-account deficit driven by rising gold imports can offset the positive sentiment from earnings, creating asymmetric risk for the INR and equity flows."
Gold is increasingly drawing capital away from equities in the current trade environment. When gold outperforms, equity risk appetite can be muted, particularly for cyclical and small-cap segments. Monitor gold prices and related flows as an early warning signal for equity allocation shifts.
What to watch today and this week
- Nifty 50 options expiry: expect elevated volatility and directional moves as positions roll or unwind
- 10-year US Treasury yield: any sustained drop reinforces easing expectations and can support Indian equities
- Gold price and import data: rising imports will be closely watched for their impact on the current-account balance
- Export indicators to the US: continued weakness would exacerbate external deficit concerns
- Corporate earnings: monitor margin trends and forward guidance for signs of durable recovery
- Short-term liquidity: central bank communications and money-market rates for domestic funding conditions
Tactical guidance for professional traders and analysts
- Volatility-aware positioning: Ahead of options expiry, reduce oversized directional exposure or hedge using short-dated options strategies.
- Sector focus: Prioritize companies with resilient margins and export diversification that can withstand a weaker external environment.
- Monitor FX sensitivity: For equity positions with notable rupee exposure, track INR moves closely as CAD pressures may increase currency volatility.
- Watch gold-sensitive flows: Reallocate if gold inflows continue to accelerate, especially for portfolios overweight cyclical and high-beta names.
- Earnings signal vs macro headwinds: Prefer names where fundamental improvement (earnings beat, margin expansion) is visible and not solely multiple compression plays.
Watchlist tickers
- AI — monitor sector momentum and earnings commentary (use as a sector proxy where relevant)
- AM — watch earnings cadence and export exposure
- UTC — consider for interest-rate and yield-sensitivity analysis
- US — track any listed play with direct US market linkage or export exposure
(Note: these tickers are included for watchlist context; evaluate company-level fundamentals before trading.)
Risk considerations
- Short-term volatility: Options expiry and holiday-thinned offshore flows can produce outsized moves
- External financing: A widening current-account deficit raises external funding needs and can increase sensitivity to global risk-off episodes
- Commodity and FX shocks: Sudden surges in gold imports or sharp INR depreciation would pressure market sentiment despite corporate earnings improvement
Conclusion — succinct, quotable takeaway
"Earnings season can offer a tangible lifeline for India’s bulls, but the relief will be fragile if a widening current-account deficit and persistent gold inflows continue to draw capital away from equities."
Traders and institutional investors should balance earnings-driven opportunities with macro and flow-based risks, use volatility-aware hedges around the Nifty options expiry, and monitor key indicators — 10-year US yields, gold prices, export trends to the US and FX moves — for directional confirmation.
