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India’s largest commodity exchange, the Multi-Commodity Exchange of India (MCX), will remain shut for trading in the first session (9 am to 5 pm) on Shri Mahavir Jayanti. Trading will resume in the evening session between 5 pm and 11:30 pm, as per the schedule on its website. The National Commodity & Derivatives Exchange Limited (NCDEX), meanwhile, will remain closed for trading tomorrow.
Upcoming market holidays
According to the official holiday calendar, markets will next remain closed on April 3 (Friday) to observe Good Friday. It is important to note that markets are seeing three holidays in less than two weeks. Markets were also shut on March 26 (Thursday) on account of Shri Ram Navami.In total, there are 16 stock market holidays scheduled for 2026, of which four have already passed. After the two holidays this week, trading will be suspended on 10 more occasions over the remaining nine months.
Markets will next remain shut on April 14 (Tuesday) on Dr. Baba Saheb Ambedkar Jayanti. The BSE and NSE will then be closed for trading on May 1 (Maharashtra Day), May 28 (Bakri Id), June 26 (Muharram), September 14 (Ganesh Chaturthi), October 2 (Mahatma Gandhi Jayanti), October 20 (Dussehra), November 10 (Diwali-Balipratipada), November 24 (Prakash Gurpurb Sri Guru Nanak Dev), and December 25 (Christmas).
Earlier last week, Zerodha CEO Nithin Kamath took to X to comment on market holidays amid ongoing global market volatility. “It’s crazy that we live in a time when the entire global financial market seems to be at the whim and fancy of what one person decides to do. He can, and does, do whatever he wants depending on which side of the bed he wakes up on,” Kamath said, in an apparent reference to US President Donald Trump.
His statement comes as markets globally have seen sharp downswings but not equally strong upswings since the war between Iran and the US-Israel bloc began earlier this month, triggering a sharp rally in oil prices.
According to Kamath, the only way to survive as a trader in this market is to make survival the first goal, not making money. “When you’re getting whipsawed out of positions on both sides, and there’s very little you can do in a headline-driven market, the most logical thing is to trade with smaller amounts of capital, reduce the risk in your account significantly, and wait for opportunities where you can actually make money rather than taking undue risk in a highly uncertain, highly volatile environment,” he said.
“Trading is also inherently a lonely activity. And when you’re constantly getting feedback in the form of profit and loss, it takes a mental toll. This was true even when I was actively trading,” he added. So, with a long weekend coming up, Kamath said he can’t think of a better time to take a break, recharge, and come back to the “blinking red and green lights” with a fresh mind.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times.)
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