The Sensex had just kissed 42,000. Reliance was on a steroids-driven rally. New demat accounts were opening like tap water. Every Uber driver had a tip on a “multibagger.” The bull was not just alive; he was obese, lazy, and snoring loudly.
Nirmala Sitharaman stands up to present the Union Budget. The market expects fireworks. Instead, she introduces a “disputed income tax” scheme and tweaks LTCG. The street yawns.
Nobody heard the whisper from Wuhan.
The circuit filters kept tripping. Order books froze. It was like standing on a burning ship while the lifeboats were locked. The Bull Of Dalal Street Part 1 -2020- UNRATED ...
That’s when the Bull turns into a raging, retail-fueled, meme-stock, FOMO-driven monster.
Then comes the first crack.
A tiny news flash: “Coronavirus spreading in Italy.” Dalal Street doesn’t blink. “It’s a China problem,” they say. The Sensex had just kissed 42,000
The pharma and IT sectors went nuclear. While malls were closed, online trading platforms saw a 300% surge in new accounts.
The 2020 crash wasn’t a bear market. It was a panic attack dressed as a market. Chapter 3: The Resurrection (Late March – The Bull Stirring) On March 24, 2020, something happened that no technical analyst predicted.
And they recover not because of hope, but because of Every Uber driver had a tip on a “multibagger
This is the story of how that bull was slaughtered, buried, and then—miraculously—resurrected. This is Part 1. And it’s unrated because reality doesn’t come with a trigger warning. Let’s set the scene.
The Bull of Dalal Street doesn’t care about your fear. He cares about liquidity. And in March 2020, the world printed money like it was going out of style. Chapter 4: The Unrated Heroes of 2020 While the headlines were screaming “DOOM,” a few stocks quietly became legends.
Coming soon. And it’s still unrated. Did you buy the bottom or sell in panic? Drop a comment below. No judgment. Just scars.
The government announced a ₹1.7 lakh crore stimulus. Not huge by global standards, but enough to whisper to the market: “We’re not letting you die.”
Disclaimer: This is a creative, unrated storytelling post about market history. Not investment advice. Your capital is your own beast to tame.