Nifty June futures trade at premium

Nifty June futures trade at premium


India VIX tumbled 3.90% to 12.67.

The Nifty June 2026 futures closed at 24,209, a premium of 41 points compared with the Nifty’s closing at 24,168 in the cash market.

In the cash market, the Nifty 50 index rose 82.30 points or 0.34% to 24,168.

The NSE’s India VIX, a gauge of the market’s expectation of volatility over the near term, fell 3.90% to 12.67.

HDFC Bank, Infosys and Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles (PV) were the top-traded individual stock futures contracts in the F&O segment of the NSE.

The June 2026 F&O contracts will expire on 30 June 2026.

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First Published: Jun 18 2026 | 5:05 PM IST



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Nifty June futures trade at premium

Nifty extends winning streak to fifth day; banks, healthcare stocks lead gains


The benchmark indices extended their gains for a fifth consecutive session on Thursday, supported by easing crude oil prices, improving geopolitical sentiment and positive global cues. The Nifty recovered from an intraday low of 24,036.95 to close above the 24,150 mark. Healthcare, banking and financial stocks led the gains, while IT shares remained under pressure. Investor sentiment was aided by a decline in Brent crude prices, optimism over progress in US-Iran peace efforts, a resumption in foreign institutional investor buying and a drop in India VIX, signalling lower market volatility.

The S&P BSE Sensex advanced 254.36 points or 0.33% to 77,409.98. The Nifty 50 index rose 82.30 points or 0.34% to 24,168. In five sessions, the Sensex jumped 4.85% and Nifty climbed 4.35%.

 

Max Healthcare Institute (up 6.46%), HDFC Bank (up 1.74%) and State Bank of India (up 1.56%)

The broader market outperformed the frontline indices. The BSE 150 MidCap Index gained 0.41% and the BSE 250 SmallCap Index added 0.67%.

The market breadth was strong. On the BSE, 2,425 shares rose and 1,811 shares fell. A total of 192 shares were unchanged.

The NSE’s India VIX, a gauge of the market’s expectation of volatility over the near term, declined 3.90% to 12.67.

Monsoon Update:

The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has forecast widespread monsoon rainfall over Mumbai and adjoining parts of Maharashtra by the end of June, indicating a delayed onset of the southwest monsoon in the city, where it typically arrives around June 10-11.

Numbers to Track:

The yield on India’s 10-year benchmark federal paper declined 0.06% to 6.842 compared with the previous session close of 6.865.

In the foreign exchange market, the rupee edged higher against the dollar. The partially convertible rupee was hovering at 94.3800 compared with its close of 94.5000 during the previous trading session.

MCX Gold futures for 5 August 2026 settlement declined 2.12% to Rs 150,612.

The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the greenback’s value against a basket of currencies, rose 0.29% to 100.68.

The United States 10-year bond yield shed 0.16% to 4.450.

In the commodities market, Brent crude for July 2026 settlement declined $1.62 or 2.04% to $77.93 a barrel.

Global Markets:

US stock futures pointed to a positive start for Wall Street on Thursday, with Dow Jones futures rising 213 points.

European shares traded lower ahead of interest rate decisions from the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank later in the day. Meanwhile, official data showed the UK’s unemployment rate eased to 4.9% in the three months ended April from 5.0% in the previous period.

Asian indices ended mixed after the US Federal Reserve signalled that interest rates could remain higher for longer.

The Federal Reserve kept its benchmark federal funds rate unchanged at 3.50%-3.75% at its policy meeting on Wednesday. Updated projections showed policymakers expect the year-end interest rate to stand at 3.8%, compared with 3.4% projected in March, indicating the possibility of at least one rate hike this year.

Overnight on Wall Street, equities closed sharply lower while Treasury yields rose as investors reassessed the interest-rate outlook following the Fed’s policy announcement. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 507.12 points, or 0.98%, to 51,492.55. The S&P 500 declined 1.21% to 7,420.10, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 1.34% to end at 26,021.66.

Stocks in Spotlight:

State Bank of India gained 1.56% after the banks Central Board approved a proposal to raise up to Rs 60,000 crore during FY27 through the issuance of debt instruments in Indian rupees or foreign currencies.

Redington surged 8.87% on Thursday after reports suggested Apple is preparing to raise prices on some products amid rising memory and storage chip costs. Traders expect any increase in Apple product prices could potentially lift the value of products sold through Redington’s distribution business, boosting revenue prospects from its Apple portfolio.

HFCL hit an upper circuit of 5% after the company announced that it has secured a contract worth approximately Rs 2,666.09 crore from Rail Vikas Nigam (RVNL) for the BharatNet Phase-III project in the Uttar Pradesh (West) Telecom Circle.

FSN E-Commerce Ventures, the parent of Nykaa, jumped 6.07% after the company outlined its FY30 growth strategy. At its Annual Investor Day 2026, Nykaa outlined plans to deliver 2-3 times revenue growth and 4-5 times EBITDA growth by FY30, supported by operating leverage, capital-efficient investments and margin expansion. The company is also targeting a return on capital employed (ROCE) of over 40%.

The beauty business, which exited FY26 with GMV of around Rs 15,000 crore, aims to grow GMV by 2-3 times by FY30. Nykaa Fashion, which reported FY26 GMV of Rs 4,954 crore, is targeting 3-3.5 times GMV growth by FY30 with potential high single-digit EBITDA margins and progressing towards 10%+ steady-state profitability. House of Nykaa, the company’s portfolio of beauty brands, is aiming to surpass Rs 5,000 crore in net sales value by FY30. Superstore by Nykaa, the company’s B2B distribution platform, plans to cross Rs 3,500 crore GMV by FY30.

JBM Auto added 1.96% after the companys subsidiary JBM ECOLIFE Mobility, has successfully secured a Rs 750 crore long term strategic investment from Motilal Oswal Alternates, the alternative investment arm of Motilal Oswal Group. The investment will provide growth capital to accelerate JBM Ecolifes electric bus deployment and strengthen sustainable public transportation infrastructure across India.

Lupin rose 2.56% after launching Azilsartan Medoxomil Tablets, 40 mg and 80 mg, in the United States following approval of its abbreviated new drug application (ANDA) by the US Food and Drug Administration (USFDA).

Lemon Tree Hotels added 3.13% after the company said that it has announced the opening of a new hotel in Sri Ganganagar, marking the hospitality chain’s entry into the city and strengthening its footprint in Rajasthan.

Kirloskar Ferrous Industries (KFIL) rallied 7.13% after it has secured an international export order valued at around $13.51 million from a buyer based in London, United Kingdom. Under the contract, the company will supply 30,000 metric tonnes (5%) of basic-grade pig iron on a Free on Board (FOB) basis. The order has been awarded by an international entity and is scheduled for execution with the final shipment to be completed by August 15, 2026.

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Nifty June futures trade at premium

Quick Wrap: Nifty IT Index declines 1.19%


Nifty IT index ended down 1.19% at 28466.45 today. The index is down 3.00% over last one month. Among the constituents, Infosys Ltd shed 2.61%, Persistent Systems Ltd slipped 2.07% and Coforge Ltd rose 1.18%. The Nifty IT index is down 27.00% over last one year compared to the 2.60% decline in benchmark Nifty 50 index. In other indices, Nifty Realty index added 0.69% and Nifty PSE index gained 0.68% on the day. In broad markets, the Nifty 50 recorded a gain of 0.34% to close at 24168 while the SENSEX recorded a gain of 0.33% to close at 77409.98 today.

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First Published: Jun 18 2026 | 5:04 PM IST



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Tim Cook's price hike warning puts Apple's feeder lineup at risk: Analysts

Tim Cook's price hike warning puts Apple's feeder lineup at risk: Analysts


Apple plans to raise prices on its products to offset rising memory and storage chip costs, said company CEO Tim Cook in an interview with the Wall Street Journal published on Wednesday. Cook did not say when prices would go up, by how much, or which products would be affected first — but the direction is now on the record.

 


“Unfortunately, price increases are unavoidable,” Cook told WSJ. “We’re doing our best to mitigate the huge increases that are being passed to us, and we’ve been trying to shield our customers from the increases, but the situation has become unsustainable.”

 
 


The interview comes after months of visible strain on Apple’s product lineup — from Mac configurations being quietly delisted to delivery timelines stretching into months. Cook’s remarks are the clearest signal yet that the company is moving from managing the situation internally to passing costs on to customers.


The memory problem


The root cause is something that has been building for over a year. AI infrastructure is consuming memory at a scale the industry wasn’t built for. Data centres running large language models require high-bandwidth memory (HBM) — a specialised type of DRAM — and manufacturers like Samsung and SK Hynix have been steadily shifting production capacity toward it because the margins are substantially better. The result is a supply squeeze on general-purpose DRAM and NAND flash, the kind that goes into smartphones, tablets, and laptops.

 


“There’s less supply at a time when consumers want devices and the memory guys are passing along huge price increases,” Cook told the Journal. “We definitely need memory pricing and supply to return to reasonable levels for consumer products. That’s the bottom line.”


Cook indicated that Apple is particularly exposed on the DRAM side, singling out the LPDDR market as a specific concern. He also noted that Apple is prepared to use its cash reserves to help secure memory supply, without going into specifics. “We’re willing to use our balance sheet to help be a part of the solution,” he said. “Obviously, more capacity is needed.” He was careful to clarify, however, that Apple has no plans to build its own memory or storage factories.

 


Cook will hand over the reins to John Ternus in September. This interview may be one of the more consequential things he says before he does.


This was coming


The signals were there months before Cook put it on the record.

 


In January, ZDNET Korea reported that Samsung and SK Hynix had raised LPDDR prices for Apple by close to double compared to the previous quarter — Samsung reportedly proposed an increase of over 80 per cent, while SK Hynix proposed roughly 100 per cent.

 


Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo flagged the implications at the time. In a post on X, he noted that iPhone memory pricing had moved to quarterly negotiations from the previous six-month cycle, and that another hike was already visible for the second quarter of 2026. Kuo also wrote that Apple’s plan for the upcoming iPhone was to absorb as much cost as possible and keep starting prices flat — at least for marketing purposes — while accepting margin compression.

 


By February, after Apple’s Q1 FY2026 earnings call, Kuo summarised the situation: Apple had publicly identified memory as a “cost pressure” rather than a “supply constraint.” That distinction mattered to investors tracking semiconductor stocks. On the earnings call itself, Tim Cook acknowledged that memory had a minimal impact on Q1 gross margins but would be more of a factor in Q2 — a signal that the numbers were already starting to move.


Already visible on the Mac lineup


Price hikes are still ahead, but supply constraints are already here, and buyers have been living with them for months.

 


As reported by Business Standard in May, several Mac Studio, Mac mini, and MacBook configurations were already facing delays or had been quietly delisted from Apple’s online store in India. What started with high-memory Mac Studio variants in April — where 512GB unified memory options disappeared and 256GB variants showed four-to-five month delivery windows — had, by May, spread to the MacBook line. MacBook Air models with 32GB unified memory were facing weeks of delivery delays. The MacBook Pro with 128GB unified memory was showing roughly a month of lead time.


The pattern was consistent: higher-memory variants vanish first, then mid-tier configurations start stretching out, and by the time you notice, the options have quietly narrowed.


Apple’s structural advantage, and its limits


Apple is not a normal customer for memory suppliers. It ships approximately 247 million iPhones a year, according to a Business of Apps report. iPhone DRAM and NAND consumption accounts for something in the range of 20 to 25 percent of global smartphone memory demand, as per Kuo. That scale gives Apple leverage that only a few consumer device companies can match.

 


Counterpoint Research, in a note published on June 16, made Apple’s advantage explicit. In week 20 of 2026, global smartphone sales fell 8 per cent year-on-year — the ninth consecutive week of decline. Apple was up 10 per cent over that same period, while Chinese OEMs like Xiaomi, OPPO, and Vivo were down between 10 per cent and 19 per cent.

 


Counterpoint’s Associate Director, Sujeong Lim, noted that brands with stable supply chains and high visibility into memory were able to maintain more consistent pricing and promotional strategies, calling Apple’s position in that regard “advantageous.”

 


Faisal Kawoosa, Founder and Chief Analyst at Techarc, echoed a similar stance “Apple is not only tier 1 customer for all the supply chain but a marquee one as well for everyone supplying them components including memory. At the same time it doesn’t operate in segments like sub Rs 30k in smartphones where BOM structure is completely disrupted. So from both negotiations powers and cost structure it’s well cushioned as a brand.”

 


Navkendar Singh, Associate Vice President at IDC India, put a finer point on what Apple’s leverage actually means in practice right now. Quantifying the buffer is difficult, he said, but the more important advantage is not price — it is supply assurance. “Even if somebody is willing to give the price, supply is assured to these brands more than the pricing.” Apple and Samsung, by virtue of their sheer volume and supply chain pull, are in a different conversation with memory manufacturers than everyone else, he added.

 


But scale has limits when the structural imbalance is severe enough.

 


Kawoosa said that Apple has always been tight on maintaining profitability, and as “increasing component costs eat up its profit margins, it will spill over some price increase to the customers.”

 


Kawoosa also connected the Mac delisting pattern to the broader cost environment: “Yes, due to memory costs, brands including Apple are having lesser variants of RAM-storage configurations.”


What gets hit first


Apple’s premium positioning gives it a buffer that mid-range Android brands don’t have, but that buffer does not apply uniformly across its own lineup.

 


Kawoosa flagged Apple’s so-called feeder portfolio as the most exposed. “For India and other emerging markets, I do see some concern around its ‘feeder portfolio’ — essentially the E series of smartphones, Neo for MacBooks and Air for Tablets — where we might get to see early impact.”

 


He added that he would not be surprised to see Apple introduce a Neo lineup for iPads, widening the entry-level tier in a way that gives it pricing flexibility without visibly raising prices on flagship models.

 


Singh added that Apple accessories such as Apple Watch and AirPods will likely remain insulated from the impact of component price inflation. He said that these devices “still run on legacy silicon, and the volumes are far lower” compared to the likes of iPhones, Macs and iPads.

 


“While you might see it somewhere, I think it will be more pronounced in these categories,” he said, referring to iPhone, Mac, and iPad.


Impact on possible foldable and September launches


Apple is reportedly on track to launch its first foldable iPhone in September alongside the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max. That is a significant new category, and it arrives in the middle of a component cost squeeze.

 


Singh does not expect the foldable to be shelved, but he does not rule out a minor slip in timeline. “Foldable, I’m not too sure that it will have an impact. Might be a delay of one or two months if at all. Otherwise, we’re looking at a foldable launch this year only.” He added that if it does not land in September alongside the Pro lineup, it will still happen by October or November at the latest.

 


As for the next generation iPhones, Singh said that higher storage tiers like 1TB will be available in smaller quantities, with supply weighted more toward 256GB and 512GB variants.

 


On pricing, Singh said Cook’s interview should be read partly as Apple setting the stage for price increases on the September launches. He added that buyers should expect roughly $100 to $150 upside on every SKU.

 


It should be noted that Bloomberg has reported that Apple is shaking up its release schedule. The company typically unveils all models in the new iPhone series at the same time in September. But this year, the September lineup will reportedly be limited to the higher-end models, such as the Pro, Pro Max, and the anticipated foldable. The report stated that the new standard iPhone model, along with the refreshed Air model, could launch in spring 2027.


What this means for India


While Apple’s premium offerings grab the most headlines, its feeder portfolio, as Kawoosa describes it, pulls first-time Apple buyers and young professionals into the ecosystem. If memory cost inflation makes those entry points more expensive, or thins out the configuration options available at existing prices, the calculus changes for a significant segment of buyers.

 


Singh’s read on India demand was measured. IDC’s forecast for the overall Indian smartphone market this year is a 13 per cent decline, but he said the bulk of that drop is coming from Android. Apple, he said, will not degrow in any meaningful sense. “Even if it degrows, it’s a plus minus few percentage points. It will hold because Apple customers are more price immune than other brands.”

 


Kawoosa was direct about what Apple’s exposure means at a market level: “Apple shrinking in demand will affect the value of the market more than volume.” Even a modest pullback in iPhone sales in India hits the premium segment hard because iPhones dominate the high average selling price end of the market.

 


This is even clearer from Counterpoint’s data. The market intelligence firm reported that in India, Apple had 28 per cent smartphone market wholesale value share in CY 2025 while having roughly 9 per cent market share in terms of shipments.

 

For buyers who have been sitting on the fence, that context cuts both ways. Apple’s pricing has held its ground far, but with cost increases now confirmed in direction if not in detail, the current generation of devices may represent the last relatively stable entry point for some time. If you have been planning to buy, now is probably the better side of the wait. 


Kawoosa put it plainly. “It is anyways the best time to buy any gadget from any brand right now because prices are only going up. Even if there are festive season discounts later, they will at best bring prices back to current levels. The traditional logic of waiting for festive offers no longer holds. People used to wait because they would get good deals. This time, prices are not in any control.”

 



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कंगारू टीम से डेब्यू करने वाले भारतीय खिलाड़ी का बड़ा बयान, ‘हमेशा ऑस्ट्रेलिया से खेलने का…’

कंगारू टीम से डेब्यू करने वाले भारतीय खिलाड़ी का बड़ा बयान, ‘हमेशा ऑस्ट्रेलिया से खेलने का…’


Nikhil Chaudhary Statement: भारत की राजधानी दिल्ली में जन्म लेने और पंजाब के लिए घरेलू क्रिकेट खेलने वाले निखिल चौधरी (Nikhil Chaudhary) ने बीते बुधवार (17 जून) ऑस्ट्रेलिया लिए अंतर्राष्ट्रीय डेब्यू किया. निखिल को बांग्लादेश के खिलाफ पहले टी20 इंटरनेशनल के लिए ऑस्ट्रेलिया की प्लेइंग 11 का हिस्सा बनाया गया. अब कंगारू टीम से डेब्यू के बाद निखिल ने बड़ा बयान देते हुए कहा कि वह हमेशा से ही ऑस्ट्रेलिया के लिए खेलना चाहते थे. 

बताते चलें कि निखिल ने मार्च 2017 में पंजाब के लिए फर्स्ट क्लास डेब्यू किया था. उन्होंने युवराज सिंह, हरभजन सिंह और शुभमन गिल जैसे सितारों के साथ पंजाब के लिए खेला. लेकिन अब अचानक ऑस्ट्रेलिया डेब्यू के बाद उनका बयान चौंकाने वाला रहा. 

‘हमेशा ऑस्ट्रेलिया से खेलने का ख्वाब’

बांग्लादेश के खिलाफ डेब्यू मैच के बाद बात करते हुए निखिल ने कहा, “आप हमेशा ऑस्ट्रेलिया के लिए खेलने का सपना देखते हैं. एक बार मैंने ऑस्ट्रेलिया में खेलना शुरू किया, तो फिर मैंने हमेशा ऑस्ट्रेलिया से खेलने का सपना देखा. यह शायद मेरी जिंदगी का बेस्ट मोमेंट था.”

कैसे ऑस्ट्रेलिया पहुंचे निखिल?

निखिल 2020 में किसी काम से ऑस्ट्रेलिया आए थे. उसी वक्त कोविड के कारण इंटरनेशनल उड़ानें और सीमाएं बंद हो गईं. अब निखिल को ऑस्ट्रेलिया में ही रुकना पड़ा. इसके बाद निखिल ने स्थाई रूप से ऑस्ट्रेलिया में रुकने का फैसला किया. निखिल को ऑस्ट्रेलिया से खेलने की अनुमति मिल गई, भले ही वह ऑस्ट्रेलिया के नागरिक नहीं थे.

निखिल को 2024-25 बिग बैश लीग में हरिकेन्स से खेलने का मौका मिला. इसके बाद उन्होंने तस्मानिया के लिए लिस्ट-ए और फर्स्ट क्लास क्रिकेट में डेब्यू किया. धीरे-धीरे निखिल ऑस्ट्रेलिया टीम के करीब पहुंचे. अब बांग्लादेश के खिलाफ टी20 सीरीज में ट्रेविस हेड की गैरमौजूदगी में निखिल को खेलने का मौका मिल गया. इस तरह निखिल ऑस्ट्रेलिया पहुंचे और उन्हें खेलने का मौका मिला. अब देखना दिलचस्प होगा कि ऑस्ट्रेलिया के लिए खेलते हुए निखिल का करियर कितना लंबा चलता है. 

 

यह भी पढ़ें: स्मृति मंधाना ने रचा इतिहास, ऐसा करने वाली पहली खिलाड़ी बनी, पुरुष क्रिकेटर तो कोसों दूर





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