BSE and NSE Announce Trading Holiday on January 15 for Maharashtra Municipal Elections

1 min read     Updated on 12 Jan 2026, 04:51 PM
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Reviewed by
Naman SScanX News Team
Overview

BSE and NSE have declared January 15, 2026 as a trading holiday for Maharashtra municipal elections, affecting all segments including equity, derivatives, and commodity trading. Equity derivatives contracts expiring on January 15 will be preponed to January 14, with changes reflected in contract master files.

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*this image is generated using AI for illustrative purposes only.

India's major stock exchanges BSE and NSE have announced a complete trading holiday on January 15, 2026, in observance of municipal corporation elections in Maharashtra. The decision affects all trading activities across multiple market segments.

Trading Segments Affected

According to BSE's official circular, the following trading segments will remain closed on January 15:

Segment Status
Equity Segment Closed
Equity Derivatives Closed
Commodity Derivatives Closed
Electronic Gold Receipts Closed

Contract Expiry Adjustments

To manage the impact of the trading holiday, both exchanges have made specific adjustments to derivative contracts. Equity derivatives contracts that were originally scheduled to expire on January 15, 2026, will be preponed to January 14, 2026.

BSE has confirmed that these modifications will be incorporated into the end-of-day contract master files, ensuring seamless transition for market participants and trading systems.

Exchange Coordination

Both BSE and NSE have issued coordinated circulars regarding the holiday announcement. NSE has modified its earlier circular to declare January 15 as a trading holiday across both the capital market segment and futures & options (F&O) trading.

The synchronized approach by both exchanges ensures uniformity in market operations and prevents any confusion among investors and traders regarding trading schedules during the Maharashtra municipal elections.

Historical Stock Returns for BSE

1 Day5 Days1 Month6 Months1 Year5 Years
+4.54%+4.65%+2.75%+10.57%+60.84%+3,870.69%

Sensex Records Worst Start to Year in Decade with 1.93% Decline

3 min read     Updated on 12 Jan 2026, 09:52 AM
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Reviewed by
Radhika SScanX News Team
Overview

BSE Sensex recorded its worst start to a calendar year in a decade, declining 1.93% in the first 10 days of 2026. Foreign institutional investors sold ₹11,784 crores worth of equities despite domestic institutional buying of ₹17,900 crores. Geopolitical tensions, delayed US-India trade talks, and sector rotation drove broad-based weakness, with cyclical sectors declining 4.70%-5.80% while defensive stocks showed resilience.

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*this image is generated using AI for illustrative purposes only.

India's equity markets have endured their most challenging start to a calendar year in the past decade. The benchmark BSE Sensex declined 1.93% between January 1 and January 10, 2026, marking the worst opening stretch for Indian equities since 2016, when the index had fallen 4.53% amid global growth concerns and China-led volatility.

Market Performance in Opening Week

The selloff intensified during the first full trading week of 2026, with broad-based weakness across market segments.

Index Weekly Decline Closing Level
Sensex 2.55% 83,576
Nifty 50 2.45% 25,683
Midcap Index 2.60% -
Smallcap Index 3.00%+ -

The broader market indices performed even worse than benchmark indices, with midcap and smallcap stocks declining 2.60% and over 3.00% respectively, signaling a clear shift toward risk aversion among investors.

Foreign Investment Outflows Drive Weakness

Foreign institutional investor (FII) selling emerged as a primary driver of market weakness. Net cash market outflows from FIIs reached ₹11,784 crores through January 9, continuing the negative trend from 2025 when foreign investors were net sellers worth ₹1.66 lakh crores.

Investment Flow Amount (₹ Crores) Period
FII Outflows 11,784 Till January 9
DII Inflows 17,900 January 2026
Weekly FII Sales 8,808 Week ended January 9
Weekly DII Purchases 15,700 Week ended January 9

Despite robust domestic institutional investor buying of nearly ₹17,900 crores in January, the Nifty still declined over 600 points during the week, highlighting the intensity of negative sentiment.

Geopolitical and Trade Concerns

According to Dr. Ravi Singh, Chief Research Officer at Master Capital Services, multiple factors contributed to the market pressure. Rising geopolitical uncertainty emerged after the US approved Russian sanctions legislation that could lead to steep tariffs, including on countries purchasing Russian energy. The lack of progress on the anticipated US-India trade agreement, which markets expected to advance early in the year, further dampened investor confidence.

VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist at Geojit Investments, noted that foreign investors entered 2026 continuing the selling trend from the previous year, when FII outflows also contributed to a nearly 5.00% decline in the rupee.

Sector-wise Impact

The selloff affected most sectors, with cyclical and policy-sensitive segments bearing the heaviest impact.

Sector Weekly Decline Key Factors
Oil & Gas 4.70%-5.80% Trade fears, commodity uncertainty
Energy 4.70%-5.80% Global volatility
Infrastructure 4.70%-5.80% Policy sensitivity
Banking Negative Post record-high correction
Defence Modest gains Defensive positioning
Consumer Durables Modest gains Domestic demand focus

Defensive sectors such as defence stocks and consumer durables demonstrated relative resilience, ending the week with modest gains as investors sought safety in domestic demand-linked themes.

Market Outlook and Investment Strategy

Ajit Mishra, SVP of Research at Religare Broking, observed that the sharp decline has broken the Nifty's short-term uptrend, with the index slipping below key moving averages and signaling potential near-term weakness unless it decisively recovers lost levels.

Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Investments, emphasized that while near-term volatility appears likely, India's domestic fundamentals remain supportive. Strong GDP growth, resilient credit demand, and steady consumption trends could attract selective buying opportunities even if headline indices remain range-bound.

Analysts recommend focusing on quality large-cap stocks, avoiding aggressive positions in high-risk segments, and maintaining preparedness for short-term market swings. The consensus suggests that sustained market recovery will likely depend on two critical factors: a turnaround in FII investment flows and clearer signals regarding global trade developments and earnings growth momentum.

Historical Stock Returns for BSE

1 Day5 Days1 Month6 Months1 Year5 Years
+4.54%+4.65%+2.75%+10.57%+60.84%+3,870.69%
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