
'Fear Index' India VIX falls below 14, signals cooling market nervousness
Mumbai: Market fear and nervousness eased on Thursday as the India VIX -- often referred to as the 'fear index' -- dropped below the key level of 14.
This came even as investors remained cautious due to ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.
In the noon trade, the India VIX was down 2.5 per cent at 13.92. This marks a 20 per cent drop in the volatility index over the past one month -- indicating that traders are less worried about sudden market swings.
Experts said with the India VIX trading below the important 15 mark, it signals reduced volatility and reflects improving investor confidence.
This could support the current market uptrend, provided other global and domestic cues remain stable.
"The decline in the fear index suggests that investors are reacting calmly despite geopolitical concerns," they noted. It also points to strong institutional flows and better global signals contributing to the positive mood.
In the previous session, the India VIX had closed at 14.27, slightly down from 14.40, showing a steady but cautious investor sentiment.
With the latest move, markets seem to be shifting into a more stable phase, though risks still remain on the horizon.
Meanwhile, the benchmark indices were slightly down. The Sensex slipped by 37.40 points, or 0.05 per cent, to 81,407.26 during the intra-day session .
The Nifty also dipped 7.20 points, or 0.03 per cent, to 24,804.85 over the US Federal Reserve policy decision and weak Asian cues.
As expected, the US Federal Reserve decided to keep interest rates unchanged.
However, in its statement, the central bank maintained its forecast for two rate cuts this year, although a growing number of policymakers now believe there may be no cuts at all.
'The Fed also made a slight revision to its long-term outlook, now projecting only one quarter-point cut each in 2026 and 2027,' said Mandar Bhojane of Choice Broking.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Indian Express
an hour ago
- New Indian Express
Sensex, Nifty end lower on Thursday amid Middle East tensions
CHENNAI: Indian equity benchmarks ended marginally lower on Thursday as investor sentiment remained subdued amid escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, volatility in crude oil prices, and global economic uncertainty. The looming deadline for the US to impose former President Donald Trump's reciprocal tariffs, along with the US Federal Reserve's decision to keep interest rates unchanged at 4.25–4.5%, added to market caution. The BSE Sensex declined by 82.79 points or 0.10% to settle at 81,361.87, after trading in a narrow range of 81,583.94 to 81,191.04 during the day. The broader NSE Nifty50 ended 18.80 points or 0.08% lower at 24,793.25. Selling pressure was broad-based, with 22 of the 30 Sensex stocks ending in the red. Key laggards included Adani Ports, Bajaj Finance, Tech Mahindra, IndusInd Bank, and Nestle India, falling between 2.50% and 1.28%. On the other hand, Mahindra & Mahindra, Titan Company, Larsen & Toubro, Bharti Airtel, and Maruti Suzuki India provided some support, gaining between 0.45% and 1.69%. In the broader markets, the Nifty Midcap100 and Nifty Smallcap100 underperformed the benchmarks, closing down by 1.63% and 1.99%, respectively. Sectorally, the Nifty Auto index bucked the trend to emerge as the sole gainer, rising 0.52%, driven by gains in Eicher Motors, Mahindra & Mahindra, and Bajaj Auto. In contrast, the Nifty PSU Bank index led sectoral declines, shedding 2.04%, followed by losses in the Metal, Media, and Realty indices—all down more than 1%. Most other sectoral indices also ended in negative territory. Volatility remained subdued, with the India VIX easing 0.14% to 14.26, signaling a relatively stable risk environment despite global headwinds. Market breadth was firmly negative, with 2,363 stocks declining on the NSE compared to 516 advances, while 75 stocks remained unchanged.


Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
How do you build a $500 million coffee chain? By selling matcha to teens.
At 3:30 p.m. on the Upper East Side of New York City, Emma and Maddie, both 12 years old, are sipping matcha lattes at their usual after-school hangout: Blank Street Coffee. As the name suggests, Blank Street made its name in coffee—launching in 2020 with a Brooklyn cart, and then, with the backing of millions in venture capital, rapidly expanding with stores across the city and beyond. Coffee snobs balked at the brand: The chain's automated espresso machines and aggressive expansion plan struck them as inauthentic to cafe culture. But now the company has caught a fresh stride by leaning into sugary, colorful, caffeinated, TikTok-friendly green tea. There are a variety of flavors—among them, strawberry-shortcake matcha, blueberry matcha, white-chocolate matcha. New this month are a rocky-road latte and cookies-and-cream matcha. 'At first I didn't like it, but now I do," Emma said of her $7 iced green drink, smiling through her braces. The sixth-grader said she charged the drinks to her parents' credit card once or twice a week. 'The matcha part isn't sweet, but the part with the syrup and stuff at the bottom is good." 'I used to walk by here and not know what it was, but I heard about it from TikTok so I stopped in," added Maddie. 'It's become a trend. A lot of the high-schoolers order it at school." Blank Street joins many brands, including Sephora and Stanley, that have been propelled to a broader cultural relevance because of teen customers. The craze now has teens and Gen Z customers proudly sipping matcha and posting about brightly colored drinks that measure high in sugar and even higher in clout. The company now boasts a $500 million valuation, a large number for a coffee chain that isn't Starbucks. 'I see people all the time in class with a Blank Street cup," said Cooper, a 15-year-old ninth-grade private-school student. He said the coffee chain had invaded his New York City classrooms this past fall. He estimates he patronizes Blank Street four times a week. Blank Street co-founders Vinay Menda, 32, and Issam Freiha, 29, say they didn't set out to capture the wallets of Sephora teens. They are college friends who started the coffee chain after working together in venture capital. Freiha is originally from Lebanon and Menda from Dubai. The duo researched trendy Asian coffee chains and decided to try a similar approach in the states. (A third co-founder, Ignacio Llado, joined in 2022 to expand Blank Street to the U.K.). They realized they could hit it big with flavored matcha two years ago after a mixologist on their London team created a blueberry drink that went viral. Since then, Blank Street has been doubling down on new matcha beverages, rolling out a few every season. Matcha now accounts for approximately 50% of the business, Menda said. Blank Street raised $25 million in a Series B round of funding at the end of May, bringing its total funding amount to $135 million, a spokeswoman for the company said. The company says it is profitable. It earns an estimated revenue of $149 million annually, a person familiar with the business said. It has plans to eventually expand its 90 global stores to locations such as Miami and Los Angeles. 'The influencers are all drinking it, like it's just a part of their lives, so you feel like you got to try it," said Madison Ginsberg, a 19-year-old sophomore at the University of Florida. To help its marketing team think about customers it serves, global creative director Mohammad Rabaa says his team creates fake personas with character-building mood boards around each new matcha drink, to 'market it in a hyper-specific way." Blank Street's strawberry-shortcake matcha persona is, for example, 'an East London Girl who listens to Katseye," Rabaa, 29, said. 'The Aries latte is someone who hangs out in McCarren Park, is from Brooklyn and feels, to me, more Charli [XCX]." A new cookies-and-cream matcha drink is 'a Lower East Side Dimes Square boy." The team hasn't decided what kind of music the character listens to yet. The company has had huge success with some flavors, like banana-bread matcha. Others haven't done as well, like a grapefruit cold-brew spritz Freiha described as 'the most rogue one we've ever done." (The character for that one was 'a Dua Lipa listener who does summer in the Amalfi coast. Very bougie," Rabaa said.) In other words, Blank Street is trying to sell a lifestyle. 'You're not just getting matcha, you're getting a vibe," said Alexis Taliento, a 23-year-old Brooklyner. Taliento said she preferred Blank Street to Starbucks, whose menu she finds overwhelming. 'Blank Street is clean, new, fresh. It's super aesthetic." Adri Thomas, a 22-year-old public-relations professional originally from Chicago, said she associated Blank Street as a hot New York spot because she had heard about it from YouTube vloggers. When she moved to New York last year, 'Blank Street was literally one of the first places I went, before I even had any of my furniture." A Blank Street matcha drink can have 25 grams of sugar—just at the daily suggested limit for women by the American Heart Association. Maddi Klancher, 23, works in financial technology and said she bought matcha from Blank Street four to five times a week, mainly out of convenience. She has had better matcha from other places, she said, but at $7 a drink, Blank Street has lower prices. Blank Street has an invite-only membership, where baristas give customers access to pay $22 a month for up to 14 drinks a week. The program has a long wait list and has fueled online frenzy. Maddie Kane, a clean-energy researcher in New York, said she had jumped the line by gifting herself a membership through the website, a loophole that's since closed. 'I hacked my way into it," Kane, 25, joked. Alessandro, 16, said she'd always thought matcha was 'disgusting," but enough peer pressure from friends had convinced her to try Blank Street's. 'Strawberry shortcake tastes like a cake," she said. 'I had a headache after."


Business Standard
2 hours ago
- Business Standard
Barometers extend losses for 3rd day; PSU bank shares decline
The domestic equity benchmarks ended with minor cuts today, extending their losing streak for third day in a row, amid ongoing escalating geopolitical tensions between Israel and Iran. Further impacting sentiment was the US Federal Reserve's decision to hold interest rates, with the central bank projecting elevated inflation and slower economic growth ahead. Market direction will likely continue to be shaped by these geopolitical developments, with investors closely tracking crude oil prices and broader global events. The Nifty settled below the 24,800 level. Barring auto index all the sectoral indices on the NSE ended in the red with PSU bank, media and realty shares declining the most. As per provisional closing data, the barometer index, the S&P BSE Sensex shed 82.79 points or 0.10% to 81,361.87. The Nifty 50 index fell 18.80 points or 0.08% to 24,793.25. in the past three trading sessions, the Sensex and Nifty declined 0.53% and 0.61%, respectively. The broader market underperformed the frontline indices. The S&P BSE Mid-Cap index declined 1.64% and the S&P BSE Small-Cap index dropped 1.77%. The market breadth was weak. On the BSE, 966 shares rose and 3,011 shares fell. A total of 140 shares were unchanged. The initial public offer (IPO) of Arisinfra Solutions received bids for 1,20,92,026 shares as against 1,30,84,656 shares on offer, according to stock exchange data at 15:30 IST on Thursday (19 June 2025). The issue was subscribed 0.92 times. The issue opened for bidding on Wednesday (18 June 2025) and it will close on Friday (20 June 2025). The price band of the IPO is fixed between Rs 210 and 222 per share. An investor can bid for a minimum of 67 equity shares and in multiples thereof. Buzzing Index: The Nifty PSU Bank index dropped 2.04% to 6,734.30. The index declined 3.14% for the three consecutive trading sessions. Central Bank of India (down 3.81%), Punjab & Sind Bank (down 3.75%), UCO Bank (down 3.36%), Bank of India (down 3.31%), Union Bank of India (down 3.07%), Canara Bank (down 3.06%), Indian Overseas Bank (down 3%), Punjab National Bank (down 2.46%), Indian Bank (down 2.16%) and Bank of Baroda (down 2.04%) declined. Stocks in Spotlight: Tata Elxsi fell 3.27%. The company announced that it has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Infineon Technologies to jointly develop application-ready EV solutions tailored to the Indian market. Markolines Pavement Technologies rose 1.61% after the company announced that it has secured a maintenance contract worth Rs 18.88 crore from Varanasi-Aurangabad NH-2 Tollway. AAVAS Financiers shed 0.35%. The companys board executive committee has approved raising up to Rs 200 crore through a private placement of non-convertible debentures (NCDs). Garware Technical Fibres declined 2.45%. The company announced that it has incorporated a wholly owned subsidiary (WOS), Garware Technical Fibres AS (GTF AS), in Norway. Marksans Pharma slipped 1.24%. The company announced that its wholly owned subsidiary Relonchem has received marketing authorization for the product Oxybutynin hydrochloride Oral Solution from UK Medicines & Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (UKMHRA). Puravankara advanced 1.18% after the companys wholly owned subsidiary, Starworth Infrastructure & Construction, received a letter of intent (LoI) worth Rs 272 crore from Tru Dwellings. Elcid Investments fell 0.89%. The company announced that Ragini Vakil, chief financial officer (CFO) of the company has tendered her resignation with effect from 18 June 2025. Global Markets: US Dow Jones futures were down 187 points. Wall Street will be shut on Thursday for the Juneteenth holiday, with regular trading set to resume Friday. European shares declined on Thursday, as investors awaited the Bank of Englands rate decision due at midday. Norways central bank has cut interest rates by 25 basis points to 4.25% for the first time since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. Norges Bank had in March suggested it was expecting to cut its key sight deposit rate in June, and followed through. The Swiss National Bank has cut interest rates by a further 25 basis points to 0% adding to concerns over a potential return to negative rates. Most Asian stocks ended lower as investors digested the U.S. Federal Reserves widely expected decision to keep interest rates unchanged. Adding to the cautious mood, ongoing tensions between Israel and Iran continued to weigh on sentiment. Taiwans central bank kept its policy rate unchanged at 2% on Thursday, as widely expected, given the islands robust tech-driven economy and moderating inflation, and maintained its economic growth outlook for the year. The Philippine central bank cut its key interest rate by quarter percentage point to 5.25% for a second time this year and signaled theres scope for further easing with inflation likely to remain modest and economic growth at risk from global uncertainties. As expected, the Fed held its benchmark rate steady at 4.25%-4.5% on Wednesday, marking no change since December. Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated the committee would wait to assess the inflationary impact of President Trumps tariff measures before considering any policy shifts. Despite the hawkish pause, the Fed still pointed to two rate cuts by the end of the year. Geopolitical concerns remain front and center. Investor nerves were further rattled after Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei dismissed President Trump's calls for unconditional surrender. His remarks, delivered via a televised statement on Wednesday, were his first since Friday, when Israel escalated its offensive against Iran. Back on Wall Street, US equities ended mixed on Wednesday. The Dow slipped 0.10%, the S&P 500 edged down 0.03%, while the Nasdaq bucked the trend with a 0.13% gain.