Read sector rotation before it becomes obvious.
A z-scored sector treemap, volume-profile forensics, CVD & SMFI proxies, and a sweep / iceberg radar — built on the same NSE feed retail traders see, but read through an institutional lens.
Tune the macro and micro lens
Z-scored footprint — scores normalized vs the universe, not raw size.
Volume profile + CVD + SMFI — three institutional lenses on existing OHLCV.
Sweep & iceberg radar — anomalies live next to bulk-deal proof points.
Treemap sizing follows participation while colour reflects sector flow score. Hover any block to inspect breadth, deals on tape and average move.
One symbol. One flow narrative. Volume profile, CVD, SMFI proxy and the same chart you trade off — read through an institutional lens.
- Wait for price + volume + flow to line up before sizing in.
Every metric here is hover-explained in context. This glossary keeps the same definitions reachable in one place.
“Flow” means the buying or selling done by big players — mutual funds, banks, FIIs. When they buy heavily, prices usually rise; when they sell, they fall. This page tries to spot that footprint in public data.
Think of MFI as RSI that also looks at volume. A reading under 20 means buyers have given up (often a bottom is near). Above 80 means buyers are over-excited (often a top is near).
Volume-Weighted Average Price — the average price weighted by how much was traded. Big institutions try to buy below VWAP and sell above it. Price above VWAP usually = buyers in control.
Running tally of estimated buying minus selling. If CVD keeps rising while price moves sideways, it means someone is quietly accumulating (good sign). Falling CVD with flat price = quiet distribution (bad sign).
A sideways histogram showing how much volume traded at each price. The fattest bar (Point of Control) is the price most agreed upon — it acts as a magnet and often becomes support or resistance.
Price suddenly spikes through an obvious high or low (where stop-losses sit), then reverses. Big desks do this on purpose to trigger stops and grab the liquidity they need to fill their real order.
A huge order hidden as many small ones, like an iceberg with most of its mass underwater. You can detect it when lots of volume trades in a tight price range without the price moving much.
Accumulation = smart money buying while the public is bored or scared (price flat-to-up on rising volume). Distribution = smart money selling into excitement (price flat-to-down on rising volume).
Trades over 0.5% of a company’s shares in one day are reported by NSE as bulk deals. They show real institutional names buying or selling — this is the only “proof” section on this page; everything else is inference.
A score from roughly -100 to +100 that tells you how unusual today’s price+volume combo is, compared to other Nifty 50 stocks. Above +28 we flag accumulation, below -28 we flag distribution.
When price makes a new high but MFI doesn’t (bearish divergence) → momentum is fading, reversal often follows. The opposite (price lower low, MFI higher low) = bullish divergence.
FIIs are Foreign Institutional Investors (foreign funds). DIIs are Domestic Institutional Investors (Indian mutual funds, insurance, banks). Their daily buy/sell numbers move Nifty more than retail does.
Roadmap: deeper institutional feeds
This tab currently uses public NSE/price/volume signals and inferences. The items below are planned integrations (not active yet) that can be slotted into the same panels when data access is available.