Going by F O open interest, D-Street is nearing a bottom, maybe by March expiry

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
During the week gone by, the market witnessed nerve-wrecking volatility alongside extreme fear
The reasons for the fear may be different when seen from a historical perspective, but the very same history vindicated the fact that those
times were opportunities to buy, certainly not situations to sell. It succinctly reflects that the more things change, the more they remain
the same
This is what investors should keep in mind while sailing through such uncertain times
But it was actually the reverse
fall from 1.50 per cent since mid-February to nearly 1 per cent when the Fed formally reduced the rate. Market forces were so swift and fast
has not reduced significantly at an aggregate level
This means we are somewhat away from making a major bottom, which most likely can be witnessed during the March 2020 expiry
This will give April a fresh start for the bulls into the new financial year. Event of the WeekMarkets witnessed an IL-FS-type crisis during
the week
When such an NBFC crisis hit the market due to DHFL, IL-FS issues, the market took around 2-3 weeks to adjust to the liquidity spillover
effects
The Yes Bank saga, which is unfolding currently, is expected to settle in the coming 2-3 weeks. Hopefully March-end would end the fear,
which will give the new financial year a fresh beginning. Technical OutlookAfter witnessing heavy selloff, the index trades at the lower end
of a Rising Channel, which has supported multiple selloffs in the past and will, therefore, act as a strong support in the 10,800-850 zone,
which is evident on the daily charts
The current situation is properly aligned with the short-term panic bottoms; the channel support along with deep oversold levels will act as
strong support for the bears to cover their short positions and give the bulls a chance to stage a short-term comeback. Guest contributor
and other agenciesExpectation for the WeekGiven the volatility and fear psychology, market participants are likely to drift away and reduce
their exposure to equities till clarity emerges on the financial distress (Yes Bank and Covid-19)
RBI might deliver a surprise rate cut and Yes Bank will be taken care off by the bellwether and mother of all financial institutions of
India, SBI and LIC
This should calm the nerves of the market
Markets are expected to remain low with subdued interest with little activity from active investors. However, investors and high taxpayers
will have a very good opportunity to invest in ELSS funds before the year-end to take advantage of the 10-12 per cent correction in
frontline stocks
Investors should also accumulate respective leaders from private sector banks, NBFC, FMCG, IT and pharmaceutical sectors, as these will
That should be the principle guiding all investors. Nifty closed the week at 10,989, down 5.5 per cent.