The Bull Of Dalal Street Part 2 -2020- Web Series ((exclusive))

Writing & themes The writing balances market jargon with accessible explanations for viewers unfamiliar with finance, though it sometimes leans on clichés (greed, revenge, courtroom revelations). Themes include the moral cost of wealth, systemic corruption, and the personal fallout of public scandal. When it succeeds, the show makes the financial world feel consequential and dramatic.

The technical consultant for the series appears to be a veteran trader. The jargon is accurate—you will hear terms like "Theta decay," "Max Pain," and "Swing Failure Pattern" used correctly. However, the series does take creative liberties for drama. Some recovery trades happen a bit too conveniently, and one character uses a "secret indicator" that is pure fiction. But for the average retail investor, the educational value outweighs the cinematic exaggeration. The Bull Of Dalal Street Part 2 -2020- Web Series

is not just entertainment; it is a time capsule of the pandemic trading boom. It honors the "bulls" who kept buying when the world was selling and serves as a stark warning about leverage. Writing & themes The writing balances market jargon

The series also introduces a strong female lead—an economist who works for a foreign hedge fund betting against the Indian markets. Their ideological clash (Nationalist retail drive vs. Global capital realism) provides intellectual heft to the cat-and-mouse chase. The technical consultant for the series appears to

The Bull Of Dalal Street Part 2 -2020- Web Series

Simon Birtles

I have been in the IT sector for over 20 years with a primary focus on solutions around networking architecture & design in Data Center and WAN. I have held two CCIEs (#20221) for over 12 years with many retired certifications with Cisco and Microsoft. I have worked in demanding and critical sectors such as finance, insurance, health care and government providing solutions for architecture, design and problem analysis. I have been coding for as long as I can remember in C/C++ and Python (for most things nowadays). Locations that I work without additional paperwork (incl. post Brexit) are the UK and the EU including Germany, Netherlands, Spain and Belgium.