Bitcoin is in Lifetime high. Do you think Nifty will go Lifetime High again by 2025?
- Yes, 26500-27000
- No, Market will be in range in 1000-1200 point
Bitcoin is in Lifetime high. Do you think Nifty will go Lifetime High again by 2025?
My guess, Yes, Nifty could touch 26,500–27,000. Strong earnings, FII inflows, and macro stability support a potential lifetime high run, similar to Bitcoin’s momentum.
A top tier trader looking at Nifty in 2025 would probably say the market is still supported by strong domestic growth, healthy corporate earnings, and steady inflows from local institutions. The long term structure of the market remains intact. India continues to stand out in global equity allocations, so the broader trend still leans upward over the next year or two. Large research houses expect Nifty to move gradually higher if consumption improves and if interest rates begin to ease. This creates a slow and steady tailwind that keeps market dips attractive rather than dangerous.
At the same time the trader would warn that the near term environment is messy. Global cues are uneven. The dollar is firm. Foreign investors remain cautious. As a result the index tends to move in wide and choppy swings instead of building a clean trend. Many analysts describe the market as range bound. It is not bearish, but it is not ready for a strong breakout either. Domestic mutual fund flows offer support, yet foreign outflows and currency weakness often offset that support. This constant tug of war shapes most of the daily movement.
From a technical angle Nifty is trading near zones that traders treat as pivot regions. A sustained move above the upper boundary of the recent range can quickly create strong momentum because positioning is still cautious. That caution provides fuel for a squeeze. A drop under the lower boundary can trigger fast selling because many stop losses sit in that region. In short, the market can generate sharp moves even though the larger picture looks sideways.
A professional trader also pays close attention to macro risks. Ongoing friction between India and the United States on trade issues and the weakness in the rupee introduce uncertainty that can turn into sudden volatility. None of this destroys the long term India story, but it does create periods where the market becomes highly sensitive to headlines. During those periods timing and position size matter more than conviction.
So the likely view from a top trader is this. The long term outlook remains constructive and is supported by earnings and domestic demand. The near term path is uneven. The market rewards patience on declines rather than aggressive buying at highs. Traders treat it as a battlefield of ranges, waiting for clear breaks in either direction. They build positions slowly and respect the fact that macro events can shift sentiment very quickly.
If you want this in a different tone, such as a hedge fund manager or a pure price action scalper, I can rewrite it for that style too.