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How can retail investors make money in the current markets?
Are more earnings downgrades likely after fourth quarter earnings, and which sectors are most vulnerable?
More earnings downgrades are probable as fiscal 2024-25 (FY25) results come in. Nifty earnings forecasts for FY27 have already been cut by around 6 per cent since late last year, and global headwinds like tariffs and weak exports could trigger further cuts. Nearly 80 per cent of companies have seen FY26 profit estimate downgrades so far, with around 39 per cent facing cuts of more than 5 per cent. The most vulnerable sectors remain information technology (IT) services, consumer discretionary, metals, and parts of consumer staples due to margin pressures and demand risks. In contrast, domestically driven sectors such as banks, healthcare, defence, and capital goods continue to show relative resilience with stable earnings.
Amid global trade uncertainties, how are fund houses currently positioning their portfolios?
Fund managers are turning more defensive, reallocating towards domestic-facing sectors and high-quality defensives. Exposure to globally sensitive sectors like IT, energy, and commodities has been reduced, while weights in financials, healthcare, consumer staples, and defence have increased.
Cash holdings have risen sharply as a precautionary move. Equity mutual fund cash balances hit a record ₹1.81 trillion recently, with several top funds holding over 15–20 per cent in cash. This reflects a more guarded stance, allowing fund houses to maintain flexibility and deploy capital once volatility from global trade uncertainties presents clear opportunities.
Will the strong inflows from global fund sustain going ahead?
Global inflows into Indian equities have shown a tentative recovery after heavy selling earlier in the year, with foreign investors turning net buyers in late April and reversing part of prior outflows. However, year-to-date figures still show net selling, underscoring lingering concerns over valuations and global risks.
Sustaining these inflows will depend on stabilising global conditions, easing valuations, and the relative attractiveness of Indian growth. There is optimism that foreign portfolio investor flows will gradually improve through FY25, but the pickup is likely to be measured and cautious rather than aggressive, especially with trade and rate uncertainties still weighing on sentiment.
Do valuations in small and mid-cap stocks appear compelling at this stage?
Small-and mid-cap valuations have moderated after recent corrections but are not outright cheap. The mid-cap index is down about 12 per cent from its September peak, and small-caps are down around 18 per cent, yet valuations remain at a premium to large-caps.
Selective opportunities exist, particularly in sectors with strong domestic demand and niche growth drivers. State-run defence companies, mid-tier banks, hospital chains, and speciality consumer plays continue to show robust growth potential. While broad SMID valuations are elevated, high-quality names within infrastructure, healthcare, defence, and niche financial services offer attractive long-term opportunities.
How can retail investors best capitalise on the prevailing trade-related uncertainties?
Retail investors can capitalise on trade-related uncertainties by focusing on domestic-oriented sectors like banking, telecom, consumer staples, and healthcare, which are less exposed to global risks. These segments tend to remain resilient during trade disruptions. Additionally, market corrections driven by geopolitical or trade scares often reverse over time, so disciplined investors can use these dips to accumulate fundamentally strong stocks at lower costs.
Diversification remains critical: holding some gold or gold ETFs acts as a hedge, as gold typically performs well during global turmoil. Sticking to SIPs or periodic rebalancing allows investors to benefit from long-term compounding. Domestic retail investors continue to act as a stabilising force, cushioning the market against foreign outflows.
Ideal portfolio allocation (equity, debt, gold, cash) in the current environment?
A balanced allocation is key. Equities should make up around 60–65 per cent of the portfolio, focusing on high-quality, domestic-facing stocks. Debt or fixed-income should account for about 15–20 per cent, providing stability and income, particularly as interest rates have softened. Gold should hold a 10–15 per cent weight, serving as a hedge against global volatility and trade uncertainties.
A cash or cash-equivalent allocation of around 5 per cent (up to 10 per cent for conservative investors) ensures liquidity and readiness to deploy capital during market dips. This blend strikes a balance between growth and defence, positioning the portfolio to weather short-term risks while capturing long-term upside.

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