Article’s

Bridging Financial Theories and Market Realities: Insights from Key Episodes in the Indian Financial Market

Tamladipta Sen

(11 – 2025)

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17699932

 

The Indian financial market has undergone a remarkable evolution, emerging as a complex ecosystem where classical financial theories and modern behavioral dynamics coexist. This paper examines the intricate linkage between established financial theories and real-world developments within the Indian financial system, using an event- and concept-based approach. It integrates seminal frameworks such as the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH), Behavioral Finance Theory, Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT), Agency Theory, Information Asymmetry and Signaling Theory, and Financial Instability Hypothesis to interpret pivotal market and policy episodes – ranging from the Harshad Mehta scam (1992) and the Ketan Parekh bubble (2001) to the Global Financial Crisis (2008), Demonetization (2016), IL&FS collapse (2018), COVID-19 pandemic (2020), and Adani-Hindenburg episode (2023). By synthesizing theoretical frameworks with these events, the study reveals that India’s financial market operates as a behavioral-institutional hybrid system – a structure where rational efficiency is continuously negotiated with psychological tendencies, policy interventions, and structural constraints. The paper concludes that the evolution of India’s financial market underscores the necessity of adaptive theoretical models that account for behavioral diversity and institutional maturity in emerging economies.

 

 

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