About
About
What this is
niftyfiftyone is a daily, date-indexed reference archive of the Indian equity market. Every trading day gets one page, written twice: a Pre-Market read before the open, and an End-of-Day recap after the close — appended below the morning section, never overwriting it. Weekends and market holidays get a simpler, news-only page. There is no editing after the fact: what the morning said stays visible next to what actually happened.
The Long/Short signal
Each day's Pre-Market section includes a transparent table of market inputs — GIFT Nifty, US overnight indices, yields, FII/DII flows, USD/INR, and more — each cast as a −1, 0, or +1 vote by fixed, published thresholds. The votes sum to a net score, which maps to a label (Neutral, Mildly/Strongly Long, Mildly/Strongly Short). Nothing about this is discretionary or hand-tuned per day; the same rules run every morning.
Historically, signals built this way predict the day's opening direction only slightly better than chance (roughly 52–56%), and do worse at predicting where the market closes. That's exactly why the morning call is never edited once the close is known — it's meant to be checked against the outcome, not polished to look right in hindsight.
How it's written
Every page is produced by an unattended pipeline: ordinary code fetches public market data and computes every number, vote, and label — no language model ever touches a number. A language model is used for exactly two things: rewording news headlines into original text and writing short connecting prose. News items are never pasted from their source; each is a reworded summary with a direct outbound link to the original.
Disclaimer
Nothing on this site is financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. The Long/Short signal is an automated, mechanical guess derived only from publicly available data, and it is frequently wrong. Do your own research before making any investment decision.