Updated January 2026 SEBI Mandated

NISM Series XV Research Analyst The Complete Career Guide

Everything you need to crack the exam, build your career, and become a SEBI-registered Research Analyst — from syllabus to salary.

₹1,500 Exam Fee
100 Total Marks
60% Pass Score
3 Yrs Validity
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What is NISM Series XV?

The NISM Series XV: Research Analyst Certification Examination is a mandatory certification issued by the National Institute of Securities Markets (NISM) — a public trust established by SEBI in 2006. As per SEBI (Research Analysts) Regulations 2014, every individual working as a research analyst, or associated with one, must hold this certification.

The exam was comprehensively revised in January 2026, expanding from 13 to 15 chapters, adding case-study based questions, and increasing the application-oriented nature of the test. This makes it more rigorous — but also more valuable as a credential.

2026 Key Change: Case studies now carry 20 marks (up from 8 marks). Concept clarity is no longer optional — guesswork with 25% negative marking can be costly.
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Exam Pattern

  • Duration120 minutes
  • MCQs80 questions × 1 mark
  • Case Studies5 sets × 4 questions × 1 mark
  • Total Marks100
  • Pass Marks60 (60%)
  • Negative Marking25% per wrong answer
  • Attempts Allowed3
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Eligibility

  • EducationGraduate in any stream
  • AgeNo minimum age
  • PAN CardMandatory
  • Who Must ClearAll SEBI-registered RAs
  • Validity3 years from pass date
  • RenewalCPE or re-examination

How to Register

01

Create Account

Visit certifications.nism.ac.in and register with your email, mobile, and PAN details.

02

Select Exam

Choose NISM-Series-XV: Research Analyst, pick your preferred city, date, and time slot.

03

Pay ₹1,500

Pay via UPI, Net Banking, or Card. Gateway charges of ₹20–50 extra depending on method.

04

Download Material

Download the official NISM workbook (FREE) from the portal. This is your primary study resource.

05

Admit Card

Download admit card 1 week before exam. Print 2 colour copies. Carry a valid photo ID.

15-Chapter Breakdown

The 2026 revised syllabus spans 15 chapters. Below is a complete chapter-by-chapter breakdown with estimated weightage and key topics.

Ch. I High Weight

Introduction to Securities Markets

Role of financial markets, types of securities, market participants, stock exchanges (NSE/BSE), SEBI's role, market infrastructure institutions.

~6–8 marks
Ch. II High Weight

SEBI Research Analyst Regulations

SEBI RA Regulations 2014, registration requirements, compliance obligations, conflict of interest, disclosure norms, code of conduct.

~8–10 marks
Ch. III Medium Weight

Role of a Research Analyst

Sell-side vs buy-side research, research report types, qualities of a good analyst, research process overview, ethical responsibilities.

~5–6 marks
Ch. IV Medium Weight

Equity Market Structure & Products

Primary vs secondary markets, IPO process, FPO, rights issues, equity derivatives, ADRs/GDRs, market indices, trading mechanisms.

~5–7 marks
Ch. V Medium Weight

Research Process & Report Writing

Initiating coverage, investment thesis, report structure, buy/sell/hold recommendations, target price methodology, risk factors disclosure.

~5–6 marks
Ch. VI High Weight

Macroeconomic Analysis

GDP, inflation, interest rates, monetary policy, fiscal policy, RBI tools, business cycles, global macro factors, currency impact on equities.

~7–8 marks
Ch. VII Medium Weight

Industry & Sector Analysis

Porter's Five Forces, industry life cycle, competitive dynamics, sector-specific KPIs, regulatory environment, cyclical vs defensive sectors.

~5–6 marks
Ch. VIII High Weight

Financial Statement Analysis

P&L, Balance Sheet, Cash Flow analysis, ratio analysis, DuPont analysis, peer comparison, earnings history, corporate actions, insider activity.

~10–12 marks
Ch. IX High Weight

Valuation Principles

Price vs value, DCF model, relative valuation (P/E, EV/EBITDA, P/B), SOTP valuation, CAPM, new-age business valuation, transaction multiples.

~10–12 marks
Ch. X Medium Weight

Portfolio Construction & Risk Management

Modern Portfolio Theory, diversification, beta, alpha, Sharpe ratio, risk-adjusted returns, asset allocation, hedging strategies.

~5–6 marks
Ch. XI Medium Weight

Ethics & Professional Standards

CFA-style ethics framework, fiduciary duty, insider trading laws, front-running, market manipulation, whistleblower provisions.

~4–5 marks
Ch. XII Lower Weight

Behavioural Finance

Cognitive biases (anchoring, herding, overconfidence), prospect theory, market anomalies, how biases affect analyst recommendations.

~3–4 marks
Ch. XIII Lower Weight

Equity Research Tools & Databases

Bloomberg, Reuters, Screener.in, Moneycontrol, BSE/NSE filings, SEBI EDGAR, annual reports, investor presentations, conference calls.

~3–4 marks
Ch. XIV Lower Weight

Performance Measurement & ESG

Benchmark comparison, attribution analysis, ESG frameworks (E, S, G factors), ESG scoring, alternative investments, impact investing.

~3–4 marks
Ch. XV NEW in 2026

Technical Analysis

Concept of TA, chart types (candlestick, bar, line), Dow Theory, market trends, reversal patterns (H&S, double top/bottom), consolidation patterns, support & resistance, trendlines, technical indicators (RSI, MACD, Bollinger Bands).

~15 marks

Marks Distribution at a Glance

Financial Statement Analysis (Ch. VIII)
11%
Valuation Principles (Ch. IX)
11%
Technical Analysis (Ch. XV)
15%
SEBI Regulations (Ch. II)
9%
Macroeconomic Analysis (Ch. VI)
8%
Case Studies (all chapters)
20%
Remaining Chapters
26%

Your 30-Day Roadmap

A structured, day-by-day plan designed for working professionals. Requires ~2 hours/day. Adjust pace based on your background.

Week 1

Foundation & Regulations

Days 1–7
Day 1Read Ch. I — Securities Markets overview. Note key definitions. Download NISM workbook.
Day 2Ch. II — SEBI RA Regulations 2014. Focus on Regulation 7(2), registration, compliance.
Day 3Ch. III — Role of Research Analyst. Sell-side vs buy-side. Research report types.
Day 4Ch. IV — Equity Market Structure. IPO process, derivatives, market indices.
Day 5Ch. V — Research Process & Report Writing. Investment thesis, target price methods.
Day 6Revision: Ch. I–V. Take 20-question mock quiz. Note weak areas.
Day 7Rest / catch-up day. Review notes. Watch 1 YouTube explainer on SEBI regulations.
Week 2

Macro, Industry & Financials

Days 8–14
Day 8Ch. VI — Macroeconomic Analysis. GDP, inflation, RBI policy, business cycles.
Day 9Ch. VII — Industry & Sector Analysis. Porter's Five Forces, sector KPIs.
Day 10Ch. VIII (Part 1) — P&L and Balance Sheet analysis. Key line items, red flags.
Day 11Ch. VIII (Part 2) — Ratio analysis, DuPont, peer comparison. Practice calculations.
Day 12Ch. VIII (Part 3) — Cash flow analysis, contingent liabilities, corporate actions.
Day 13Revision: Ch. VI–VIII. Solve 30 practice questions. Focus on ratio formulas.
Day 14Rest / catch-up. Attempt a full financial statement analysis on a real company (Screener.in).
Week 3

Valuation, Portfolio & Ethics

Days 15–21
Day 15Ch. IX (Part 1) — DCF model, CAPM, cost of equity. Practice DCF calculations.
Day 16Ch. IX (Part 2) — Relative valuation: P/E, EV/EBITDA, P/B, SOTP. New-age metrics.
Day 17Ch. X — Portfolio Construction. MPT, beta, Sharpe ratio, diversification.
Day 18Ch. XI — Ethics & Professional Standards. Insider trading, conflict of interest.
Day 19Ch. XII & XIII — Behavioural Finance + Research Tools. Biases, databases.
Day 20Ch. XIV — Performance Measurement & ESG. Attribution analysis, ESG scoring.
Day 21Revision: Ch. IX–XIV. Full mock test (50 questions). Score and analyse errors.
Week 4

Technical Analysis + Final Sprint

Days 22–30
Day 22Ch. XV (Part 1) — Dow Theory, chart types, market trends. Draw charts by hand.
Day 23Ch. XV (Part 2) — Reversal patterns: H&S, double top/bottom, rounding bottom.
Day 24Ch. XV (Part 3) — Consolidation patterns, support/resistance, trendlines.
Day 25Ch. XV (Part 4) — Technical indicators: RSI, MACD, Bollinger Bands, moving averages.
Day 26Case Study Practice — Attempt 5 full case study sets. Focus on application, not recall.
Day 27Full Mock Test 1 (100 questions, timed 120 min). Simulate exam conditions.
Day 28Analyse mock test errors. Revise weak chapters. Focus on formula sheet.
Day 29Full Mock Test 2. Target 70%+. Review all case study answers carefully.
Day 30Light revision only. Review formula sheet, key definitions, SEBI regulations. Sleep well. ✓

Best YouTube Channels & Resources

Prof. Sheetal Kunder Academy

SEBI-registered RA with 18 years experience. Best channel for 2026 updated syllabus, case study walkthroughs, and exam strategy.

Best for 2026 Pattern

NISM Official Channel

Official NISM YouTube channel with introductory lectures, workbook walkthroughs, and exam guidance videos.

Official Source

CA Rachana Ranade

Excellent for financial statement analysis, valuation concepts, and stock market fundamentals in Hindi/English.

Fundamentals

Pranjal Kamra (Finology)

Great for understanding equity research concepts, business analysis, and investment frameworks in simple language.

Concepts
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Screener.in

Free tool to practice financial statement analysis on real Indian companies. Essential for case study preparation.

Practice Tool
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NISM Mock Tests (Official)

Available on the NISM portal after registration. Closest to actual exam pattern. Attempt at least 3 full mocks.

Mock Tests

Key Formulas & Ratios

The most important formulas tested in the exam. Bookmark this section for quick revision.

P/E Ratio
P/E = Market Price per Share ÷ EPS
Higher P/E = growth expectations. Compare within same sector.
EPS (Earnings Per Share)
EPS = Net Profit ÷ No. of Shares Outstanding
Diluted EPS includes convertibles and options.
Return on Equity (ROE)
ROE = Net Profit ÷ Shareholders' Equity × 100
Measures profitability relative to equity. >15% is generally good.
Return on Assets (ROA)
ROA = Net Profit ÷ Total Assets × 100
Efficiency of asset utilisation. Higher is better.
DuPont Analysis
ROE = Net Margin × Asset Turnover × Equity Multiplier
Breaks ROE into profitability, efficiency, and leverage components.
Current Ratio
Current Ratio = Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities
Liquidity measure. Ideal: 1.5–2x. Below 1 = liquidity risk.
Debt-to-Equity Ratio
D/E = Total Debt ÷ Shareholders' Equity
Leverage measure. High D/E = higher financial risk.
EBITDA Margin
EBITDA Margin = EBITDA ÷ Revenue × 100
Operating profitability before non-cash items. Key for comparisons.
Interest Coverage Ratio
ICR = EBIT ÷ Interest Expense
Ability to service debt. Below 1.5x is a red flag.
Intrinsic Value (DCF)
IV = Σ [FCF_t ÷ (1+r)^t] + Terminal Value ÷ (1+r)^n
Sum of discounted future free cash flows. r = WACC or cost of equity.
Terminal Value (Gordon Growth)
TV = FCF_n × (1+g) ÷ (r − g)
g = perpetual growth rate (usually 3–5%). Must be less than r.
CAPM
E(R) = Rf + β × (Rm − Rf)
Rf = risk-free rate, β = beta, (Rm−Rf) = equity risk premium.
EV/EBITDA
EV/EBITDA = Enterprise Value ÷ EBITDA
Enterprise Value = Market Cap + Debt − Cash. Capital-structure neutral.
Price-to-Book (P/B)
P/B = Market Price ÷ Book Value per Share
Key for banks and asset-heavy companies. P/B < 1 may signal undervaluation.
PEG Ratio
PEG = P/E Ratio ÷ EPS Growth Rate (%)
PEG < 1 = potentially undervalued relative to growth. Peter Lynch metric.
WACC
WACC = (E/V × Re) + (D/V × Rd × (1−T))
Weighted average cost of capital. Used as discount rate in DCF.
Dividend Discount Model
P = D1 ÷ (r − g)
D1 = next year's dividend, r = required return, g = dividend growth rate.
Sharpe Ratio
Sharpe = (Rp − Rf) ÷ σp
Risk-adjusted return. Higher = better. Rp = portfolio return, σp = std dev.
Beta (β)
β = Cov(Ri, Rm) ÷ Var(Rm)
β > 1 = more volatile than market. β < 1 = less volatile. β = 0 = uncorrelated.
Alpha (α)
α = Rp − [Rf + β × (Rm − Rf)]
Excess return over CAPM expected return. Positive alpha = outperformance.
Portfolio Variance (2 assets)
σ²p = w₁²σ₁² + w₂²σ₂² + 2w₁w₂σ₁σ₂ρ₁₂
ρ₁₂ = correlation coefficient. Lower correlation = better diversification.
Treynor Ratio
Treynor = (Rp − Rf) ÷ β
Like Sharpe but uses systematic risk (beta) instead of total risk.
Information Ratio
IR = (Rp − Rb) ÷ Tracking Error
Measures active return per unit of active risk vs benchmark.
Simple Moving Average (SMA)
SMA_n = (P₁ + P₂ + ... + Pₙ) ÷ n
Average closing price over n periods. 50-day and 200-day SMA are key levels.
Relative Strength Index (RSI)
RSI = 100 − [100 ÷ (1 + RS)] where RS = Avg Gain ÷ Avg Loss
RSI > 70 = overbought. RSI < 30 = oversold. 14-period is standard.
MACD
MACD = 12-day EMA − 26-day EMA
Signal line = 9-day EMA of MACD. Crossover above signal = bullish.
Bollinger Bands
Upper = SMA + 2σ | Lower = SMA − 2σ
Price touching upper band = overbought. Lower band = oversold. σ = std dev.
Exponential Moving Average (EMA)
EMA = Price × k + EMA_prev × (1−k) where k = 2÷(n+1)
Gives more weight to recent prices. More responsive than SMA.
Average True Range (ATR)
TR = max[(H−L), |H−C_prev|, |L−C_prev|]
Measures volatility. Used for stop-loss placement. Higher ATR = more volatile.

Life After NISM XV

The certification opens doors across the financial services ecosystem. Here's what you can pursue.

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Buy-Side Analyst (AMC/PMS)

Work at mutual fund houses (HDFC AMC, SBI MF) or PMS firms. Research stocks for fund managers to invest in. Higher pay, less public visibility.

Salary Range
Entry
₹4–6L
Mid
₹8–15L
Senior
₹20–50L+
Portfolio AnalysisFund ResearchRisk Assessment
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Independent Research Analyst

Register with SEBI as an individual RA. Publish paid research, run a Substack/newsletter, or provide advisory services. High autonomy, variable income.

Income Potential
Year 1–2
₹2–4L
Year 3–5
₹6–15L
Established
₹20–100L+
SEBI RegistrationContent CreationClient Management
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Credit Rating Analyst

Work at CRISIL, ICRA, CARE Ratings. Analyse creditworthiness of companies and instruments. Strong demand for financial analysis skills.

Salary Range
Entry
₹4–5.5L
Mid
₹7–12L
Senior
₹15–25L
Credit AnalysisDebt MarketsRating Methodology
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Fintech / Data Analytics

Join fintech startups (Zerodha, Groww, Smallcase) as a research or product analyst. Blend of finance and technology. Fast-growing sector.

Salary Range
Entry
₹4–7L
Mid
₹8–14L
Senior
₹15–30L
Python/ExcelData AnalysisProduct Thinking
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Investment Banking (Research)

Research support roles at investment banks (Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Axis Capital). High pressure, high reward. Often requires MBA.

Salary Range
Analyst
₹6–10L
Associate
₹12–20L
VP+
₹30–80L+
Financial ModellingPitchbooksDeal Analysis

Career Progression Roadmap

1

Clear NISM XV

Foundation certification. Mandatory for all RA roles.

2

Research Associate

0–2 years. Support senior analysts, build financial models, write research notes.

3

Research Analyst

2–5 years. Own sector coverage, publish independent reports, client interaction.

4

Senior Analyst / VP

5–10 years. Lead a team, manage institutional client relationships, media appearances.

5

Head of Research / CIO

10+ years. Strategic leadership, fund management, or independent practice.

Complementary Certifications to Pursue

CFA

CFA (CFA Institute)

The gold standard for investment professionals globally. 3 levels. Significantly boosts salary and credibility.

FRM

FRM (GARP)

Financial Risk Manager. Ideal for risk-focused roles at banks, AMCs, and rating agencies.

CMT

CMT (CMT Association)

Chartered Market Technician. Perfect complement to NISM XV's new Technical Analysis chapter.

NISM V-A

NISM Series V-A

Mutual Fund Distributors. Highest job demand (32,000+ openings). Good parallel certification.

Stock Market Terms

Essential terminology you must know for the exam and your career.

AlphaExcess return generated by a portfolio above its benchmark, adjusted for risk.
BetaMeasure of a stock's volatility relative to the market. Beta > 1 = more volatile than market.
Bull MarketA market condition where prices are rising or expected to rise, typically by 20%+ from recent lows.
Bear MarketA market condition where prices fall 20%+ from recent highs, often accompanied by pessimism.
CAPMCapital Asset Pricing Model. Describes the relationship between systematic risk and expected return.
Circuit BreakerA regulatory mechanism that temporarily halts trading when prices move beyond a set percentage.
DCFDiscounted Cash Flow. A valuation method that estimates the value of an investment based on future cash flows.
Demat AccountDematerialised account that holds securities in electronic form, eliminating physical share certificates.
Dividend YieldAnnual dividend per share divided by the current share price, expressed as a percentage.
EBITDAEarnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortisation. A proxy for operating cash flow.
Enterprise Value (EV)Total value of a company = Market Cap + Total Debt − Cash. Represents acquisition cost.
FII / FPIForeign Institutional Investor / Foreign Portfolio Investor. Foreign entities investing in Indian markets.
Free Cash Flow (FCF)Cash generated after capital expenditure. FCF = Operating Cash Flow − CapEx.
Fundamental AnalysisEvaluating a security by examining financial statements, management, and economic factors.
GoodwillIntangible asset representing the premium paid over book value in an acquisition.
HedgeAn investment made to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset.
IPOInitial Public Offering. First sale of a company's shares to the public on a stock exchange.
Insider TradingIllegal trading of securities based on material, non-public information. Prohibited under SEBI regulations.
LiquidityEase with which an asset can be converted to cash without significantly affecting its price.
MACDMoving Average Convergence Divergence. A trend-following momentum indicator using two EMAs.
Market CapitalisationTotal market value of a company's outstanding shares = Share Price × No. of Shares.
Mutual FundA pooled investment vehicle managed by a professional fund manager, regulated by SEBI.
NAVNet Asset Value. Value per unit of a mutual fund = (Total Assets − Liabilities) ÷ Units Outstanding.
P/B RatioPrice-to-Book Ratio. Compares market price to book value per share. Key for banks.
P/E RatioPrice-to-Earnings Ratio. Market price divided by EPS. Most widely used valuation multiple.
PortfolioA collection of financial investments held by an individual or institution.
RSIRelative Strength Index. Momentum oscillator measuring speed and change of price movements (0–100).
SEBISecurities and Exchange Board of India. The regulator of the Indian securities market since 1992.
Short SellingSelling borrowed securities with the expectation of buying them back at a lower price.
SOTP ValuationSum-of-the-Parts. Valuing each business segment separately and adding them up.
Support LevelA price level where a stock tends to find buying interest, preventing further decline.
Technical AnalysisEvaluating securities by analysing price charts and trading volume patterns.
WACCWeighted Average Cost of Capital. The average rate a company pays to finance its assets.
Working CapitalCurrent Assets minus Current Liabilities. Measures short-term operational liquidity.
YieldIncome generated by an investment, expressed as a percentage of its cost or current value.

Track Your Preparation

Check off chapters as you complete them. Your progress is saved in your browser.

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10 Exam Day Tips

01

Arrive 30 minutes early. Carry admit card + original photo ID (Aadhaar/PAN/Passport).

02

Read case study questions carefully. Underline key data points before attempting answers.

03

With 25% negative marking, skip questions you're less than 60% confident about.

04

Attempt MCQs first (80 marks), then tackle case studies with remaining time.

05

For calculation questions, write down the formula first, then substitute values.

06

SEBI regulation questions are usually straightforward — don't overthink them.

07

Technical Analysis (Ch. XV) is new — expect 12–15 questions. Pattern recognition is key.

08

Time management: 72 seconds per question on average. Don't spend more than 3 min on any one question.

09

Review flagged questions in the last 15 minutes. Don't change answers unless you're certain.

10

Target 70%+ in mock tests before the real exam. 60% is the pass mark — aim higher for comfort.