logo
Valuation correction creating stock-specific opportunities, not sectoral bets: Ashwini Agarwal

Valuation correction creating stock-specific opportunities, not sectoral bets: Ashwini Agarwal

Time of India7 days ago
"I don't think I can identify broad sectors at this point, but I can identify individual stocks. Outside of the financial sector, maybe
domestic healthcare
looks okay. Some other domestic consumption names also seem fine. There's a smattering of opportunities from a sector perspective, but on a bottom-up basis, there are quite a few attractive picks," says
Ashwini Agarwal
, Founder,
Demeter Advisors
.
Other than the sectors you've just mentioned—NBFCs, MFIs, and select consumption plays—given the kind of consolidation we've seen in the markets recently and the rather rangebound movement, are there any sectors that you think look attractive right now in terms of valuations, having seen some correction? Or fundamentally, are there any other sectors or pockets that could, given the current volatility, act as a sort of safety net for investors?
Ashwini Agarwal:
My sense is that this is not the time to be sector-oriented. It's a time to take a very bottom-up, individual stock approach. Again, in the short run, it's important to temper return expectations—but keep your focus on the medium term.
Productivity Tool
Zero to Hero in Microsoft Excel: Complete Excel guide
By Metla Sudha Sekhar
View Program
Finance
Introduction to Technical Analysis & Candlestick Theory
By Dinesh Nagpal
View Program
Finance
Financial Literacy i e Lets Crack the Billionaire Code
By CA Rahul Gupta
View Program
Digital Marketing
Digital Marketing Masterclass by Neil Patel
By Neil Patel
View Program
Finance
Technical Analysis Demystified- A Complete Guide to Trading
By Kunal Patel
View Program
Productivity Tool
Excel Essentials to Expert: Your Complete Guide
By Study at home
View Program
Artificial Intelligence
AI For Business Professionals Batch 2
By Ansh Mehra
View Program
For example, take
textile exports
. Obviously, they'll get hit if these tariffs are imposed, especially for companies with a high exposure to the United States in their sales mix. If stock prices react negatively, you might actually get an opportunity to buy them. But you'll have to ride out a couple of bad quarters—that goes without saying.
So, I don't think I can identify broad sectors at this point, but I can identify individual stocks. Outside of the financial sector, maybe domestic healthcare looks okay. Some other domestic consumption names also seem fine. There's a smattering of opportunities from a sector perspective, but on a bottom-up basis, there are quite a few attractive picks.
Live Events
You've shared your views on the
pharma space
, but another sector that could be in focus is electronics, which—for now—has seen some exemptions. A specific example is Apple, which has a manufacturing base in India. Trump has been demanding a shift, and just yesterday, they committed to a large investment in the US. With this whole tariff uncertainty, along with pharma, do you think the manufacturing and EMS (
Electronics Manufacturing Services
) story in India could come under question? Could this be a concern for investors?
Ashwini Agarwal:
I really can't say for sure because it's unclear whether the tariffs are here to stay, or if this is simply part of ongoing negotiations between the United States and India. We don't yet know how the dust will settle.
That said, in the long run, we have to look beyond the immediate term. India's cost advantage in manufacturing is real and here to stay. If our policy framework continues to support it, then eventually, water will find its own level—and global manufacturers will seek a cost-competitive production base. That fact doesn't change.
So, if this current noise gives us an opportunity to buy EMS companies at better prices, that would be a welcome development. Frankly, I've found EMS companies to be quite expensive so far. I tend to have a value bias, so I haven't really explored that space much yet. But yes, if stock prices weaken due to this noise, it could present an opportunity. In the long term, India's competitive advantage will remain intact.
Apart from Trump's commentary, what's on your watchlist right now? Not just earnings, but perhaps the dollar-rupee or other global markets?
Ashwini Agarwal:
At the moment, I'm really focused on the earnings season. I'm tracking companies that are improving their revenue, margin, and earnings profile both quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year—where the improvement looks sustainable. Those stocks will perform well.
One theme worth focusing on is earnings recovery—companies that have gone through a downcycle over the last two to three years, but whose earnings are now starting to bottom out. Those stocks should do very well. That's what I'm searching for. My sense is that in an overall tepid earnings environment, companies delivering 15–20% earnings growth will see significant valuation expansion. That's where my attention is right now.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Perfios Launches CAM AI, Powers 85% Faster Underwriting
Perfios Launches CAM AI, Powers 85% Faster Underwriting

Business Standard

time5 hours ago

  • Business Standard

Perfios Launches CAM AI, Powers 85% Faster Underwriting

BusinessWire India Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], August 13: India's leading B2B SaaS TechFin, has unveiled CAM AI, an AI-powered credit underwriting platform that is transforming lending operations across banks and NBFCs globally. Tailored for complex credit assessment, CAM AI reduces underwriting turnaround time by up to 85%, compressing multi-day credit assessment processes into just hours, enabling banks and NBFCs to process up to 2X more loan applications with existing teams. Built on top of Perfios' trusted AI/ML models and enriched with its proprietary GenAI and agentic tooling, CAM AI delivers specialised intelligence at scale. By fusing domain-specific LLMs, RAG pipelines, and agentic algorithms, the platform performs expert-level credit analysis, autonomously extracting, interpreting, and reconciling data across financial documents in real time. Traditional underwriting, especially for high-value loans like business loans, home loans, and loans against property, requires skilled credit analysts to manually triangulate across statements, GST filings, bank data, and financial ratios. This results in bottlenecks that hurt both lenders and borrowers- especially small and medium enterprises (SMEs), for whom timely access to capital is business-critical. CAM AI replaces weeks of manual processing with hours of intelligent automation, transforming Credit Assessment Memo generation into a real-time, audit-ready workflow. "Earlier, only a few hundred expert analysts had the skills to perform complex triangulation, like reconciling GST sales with bank deposits to flag collection issues, across thousands of loan applications," said B Krishna Chaitanya, Chief Product Officer at Perfios. "CAM AI now performs this level of expert credit scrutiny autonomously and at scale, delivering expert-level analysis without compromising accuracy." Deployed by 50+ institutions across India, SEA and MENA, CAM AI processes over 5 million transactions per month. It applies embedded credit policies to deliver policy-aligned, explainable risk assessments while maintaining complete traceability to every document, number, and source, solving a core challenge in AI adoption within regulated financial services. "We've architected CAM AI specifically for the demands of regulated financial environments," said Sumit Nigam, Chief Technology Officer at Perfios. "While we use large language models for advanced reasoning, we layer them with specialised engines for financial calculations, document verification, and regulatory compliance. Every insight is backed by source traceability, analysts can see exactly which document led to which conclusion. This hybrid approach delivers audit-ready reliability, analytical depth, and safeguards against the unpredictability of generic LLMs." CAM AI integrates seamlessly into Perfios' broader ecosystem, turning legacy workflows into GenAI-first, intelligent decisioning engines. With real-time financial analysis, contextual business logic, and autonomous document understanding, the platform ensures even junior analysts can operate at the level of a seasoned credit veteran, driving consistency, speed, and scalability across lending teams. Perfios recently also unveiled its Gen AI powered intelligence stack comprising four solutions that are transforming the BFSI industry by increasing the operational productivity upto 3x.

RBI's revised co-lending norms likely to boost NBFC growth: Crisil
RBI's revised co-lending norms likely to boost NBFC growth: Crisil

Business Standard

time11 hours ago

  • Business Standard

RBI's revised co-lending norms likely to boost NBFC growth: Crisil

The revised co-lending guidelines issued by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) are expected to create growth opportunities for non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) while expanding regulatory oversight of the segment, rating agency Crisil said in a note. The new directions extend the co-lending framework to all regulated entities (REs) and across all types of loans—secured and unsecured. 'The revised directions will increase growth opportunities for NBFCs over the long term because their applicability extends to such arrangements between all REs and all forms of loans, whether secured or unsecured,' said Malvika Bhotika, Director, Crisil Ratings. 'Further, the directions require each RE to retain a minimum 10 per cent share of the loans in their books, compared with a minimum 20 per cent exposure requirement for NBFCs currently. This should particularly benefit mid- and small-sized NBFCs that face higher funding constraints,' she added. According to Crisil, co-lending assets under management (AUM) of NBFCs have seen strong traction in recent years and are estimated to have crossed ₹1.1 trillion as of March 31, 2025. A key change in the revised guidelines is the permission for originating REs to provide Direct Lending Guarantees (DLGs) of up to 5 per cent of loans across all types of lending. Previously, this was limited to digital lending. The move is expected to enhance risk-sharing and reward alignment among co-lending partners. Uniform asset classification, borrower profiling Another positive development is the requirement that all partners in a co-lending arrangement follow consistent asset classification for a given loan exposure. This aims to ensure uniform risk assessment and greater transparency in borrower profiling. The revised norms will come into effect from January 1, 2026, or earlier if an RE chooses to adopt them in accordance with its internal policy.

RBI's Revised Co-lending Guidelines Will Boost Transparency: Report
RBI's Revised Co-lending Guidelines Will Boost Transparency: Report

India.com

time12 hours ago

  • India.com

RBI's Revised Co-lending Guidelines Will Boost Transparency: Report

New Delhi: Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) revised directions on co-lending will boost the transparency in the lending space by strengthening disclosure requirements and expanding regulatory oversight beyond banks and NBFCs, a report said on Wednesday. All forms of loans will fall under the regulatory oversight compared with only priority sector loans currently, Crisil Ratings said in the report. The directions also require each RE (regulated entity) to retain a minimum 10 per cent share of the loans in their books, compared with a minimum 20 per cent exposure requirement for NBFCs currently, which should particularly benefit mid- and smaller-sized NBFCs that face higher funding constraints. "Co-lending is seen as a win-win for NBFCs and banks alike, as it allows sharing of risk and rewards from loans they jointly extend to borrowers. For NBFCs, it enables access to bank funding and diversification in resource mobilisation avenues. For banks, on the other hand, it provides optimal access to harder-to-reach customers and geographies," the report said. Notably, the co-lending assets under management of NBFCs have seen healthy traction over the past few years and are estimated to have crossed Rs 1.1 lakh crore as of March 31, 2025. "The revised directions will increase growth opportunities for NBFCs over the long term because their applicability extends to such arrangements between all regulated entities (REs) and all forms of loans, whether secured or unsecured," said Malvika Bhotika, Director, Crisil Ratings. "Moreover, enhanced disclosure requirements on a quarterly or annual basis, such as a list of co-lending partners, weighted average rate of interest, fees charged or paid, details of default loss guarantee (DLG), should improve transparency and benefit all stakeholders.' The provision of allowing originating REs to provide DLG up to 5 per cent of loans to all forms of lending, as against only for digital lending, will broaden the sharing of risk and rewards among co-lending partners. The directions are applicable from January 1, 2026, or from any earlier date as decided by an RE as per its internal policy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store