Core QueryAxis Concept
How to Read What the Market Is Actually Doing
Market intelligence translates raw NSE and BSE data — breadth, sector rotation, regime, liquidity — into plain-English signals that tell you whether conditions favour buyers or sellers right now.
5
intelligence signals
200+
lessons planned
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live updates
What is Market Intelligence?
Market intelligence is the practice of reading the internal structure of a stock market — not just its headline index level — to understand the true health of a trend. While the Nifty 50 index can rise, market intelligence asks: how many stocks are actually advancing? Which sectors are leading and which are lagging? Is volume confirming the move? When 70% of NSE-listed stocks are declining while the index is flat, that is a bearish breadth divergence that market intelligence detects and the index alone cannot reveal.
QueryAxis operationalises market intelligence into five measurable signals: market breadth (advance-decline ratio across NSE and BSE), sector rotation (capital flows between defensive and offensive sectors), market regime (trending vs ranging conditions), liquidity intelligence (volume and delivery data), and the Opportunity Score — a composite 0–100 rating that synthesises all five signals into a single actionable read. Together these signals replace the noise of news-driven commentary with data-driven market context.
17 Lessons
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Market Breadth
How advance-decline ratios reveal market participation beyond the index.
Read lesson →Sector Leadership
Which NSE and BSE sectors are leading — and where institutional capital is flowing.
Read lesson →Sector Rotation
How capital moves between defensive and offensive sectors across the market cycle.
Read lesson →Liquidity Intelligence
Why volume and delivery percentage matter more than price alone.
Read lesson →Market Narrative
How QueryAxis synthesises five signals into a plain-English daily market story.
Read lesson →Opportunity Score
How QueryAxis synthesises 5 signals into a single 0–100 market rating.
Read lesson →Market Regime
Trending, ranging, and transitional markets — and how to trade each.
Read lesson →Breadth Divergences
When the index and breadth disagree — and what it predicts.
Read lesson →Advance Decline Ratio
The precise calculation behind market breadth — and how to use it daily.
Read lesson →Advance Decline Line
The cumulative breadth indicator that reveals trend health and divergences over time.
Read lesson →New Highs vs New Lows
How the count of 52-week highs and lows confirms or betrays the index trend.
Read lesson →Breadth Thrust
Explosive participation events that mark major market turning points — and how to confirm them.
Read lesson →Breadth Composite Score
How QueryAxis combines five breadth signals into a single 0–100 intelligence score.
Read lesson →Market Internals Dashboard
How professionals read all seven market internals together to judge true market health.
Read lesson →Detecting Market Tops
The six internal signals that warn of a market peak weeks before price confirms the top.
Read lesson →Detecting Market Bottoms
Panic selling, capitulation, breadth thrusts, and the signals that mark safe re-entry points.
Read lesson →QueryAxis Market Intelligence Framework
The complete system — how all eight signals connect into one unified read on the NSE market.
Read lesson →Core Concepts
Market Breadth
The percentage of stocks advancing versus declining across an entire exchange. When more than 60% of NSE-listed stocks are advancing, breadth is considered strong. When fewer than 40% are advancing, breadth is weak — regardless of what the Nifty 50 shows.
Sector Rotation
The cyclical shift of capital between market sectors as economic conditions change. Rotation from defensives (FMCG, pharma) into cyclicals (metals, realty) typically signals improving risk appetite. The reverse signals defensiveness.
Market Regime
The current character of the market: trending (directional momentum, breakouts work), ranging (mean reversion works, breakouts fail), or transitional (low reliability). Regime determines which strategies apply.
Opportunity Score
QueryAxis's proprietary 0–100 composite score. Scores above 70 indicate favourable conditions for equity exposure. Scores below 40 indicate elevated risk. The score updates daily using breadth, sector rotation, regime, and liquidity data.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is market intelligence and how is it different from technical analysis?▾
Technical analysis studies price and volume patterns on individual charts. Market intelligence reads the internal structure of the entire market — breadth, sector rotation, regime — to assess whether conditions favour buyers or sellers at a market-wide level. Both are complementary: market intelligence tells you whether to be aggressive or cautious; technical analysis tells you which stocks to trade.
What is market breadth and why does it matter?▾
Market breadth measures how many stocks are advancing versus declining across the entire exchange, not just the index components. When the Nifty rises but only 30% of NSE stocks are advancing, that is a bearish divergence — the index is being held up by a few large-cap stocks while most of the market is weak. Breadth reveals participation.
How does QueryAxis measure market breadth?▾
QueryAxis calculates the advance-decline ratio across NSE-listed stocks daily, classifying breadth as Strong (>60% advancing), Moderate (50–60%), Neutral (40–50%), Weak (30–40%), or Very Weak (<30%). This classification feeds the Opportunity Score and Daily Briefing narrative.
What is an Opportunity Score?▾
The QueryAxis Opportunity Score is a 0–100 composite rating of current market conditions. It synthesises market breadth, sector rotation signals, market regime, and liquidity data. A score above 70 indicates conditions that historically favour equity exposure; below 40 indicates elevated risk for new positions.
How often does market intelligence data update on QueryAxis?▾
Market intelligence signals — breadth, sector rotation, regime, and Opportunity Score — update daily after NSE and BSE market close. The Discovery page and Daily Briefing reflect the latest session's data.