logo
Valuations, fresh equity supply key risk to Indian stock market: Chris Wood

Valuations, fresh equity supply key risk to Indian stock market: Chris Wood

High valuations, especially in the midcap space, coupled with fresh supply of equity via the initial public offers (IPOs) are the main risks to the Indian stock markets, cautioned Christopher Wood, global head of equity strategy at Jefferies in his recent note to investors, GREED & fear.
The rally in the market (since recent lows), Wood cautions, means that valuations have become an issue again, most particularly in the mid-cap space.
The Nifty Index now trades at 22.2x 12-month forward earnings after rising by 14.1 per cent from its April 7 low. While the Nifty Mid-Cap 100 Index trades at 27.1x 12-month forward earnings, following a 23.7 per cent gain from its April 7 low.
'This is also why corporates are again placing equity to take advantage of such valuations. The equivalent of $7.2 billion of equity supply was raised last month and $6 billion so far in June. It is this supply which poses the main risk to the market. Equity supply was running at around $7 billion a month prior to the correction, which began in late September last year,' Wood wrote.
Mid, smallcaps steal the show
From April 7 levels, while the Nifty 50 has rallied nearly 12 per cent till date, the up move in the mid-and smallcap indices has been sharper. The Nifty Midcap 150 index and the Nifty Smallcap 250 indexes have surged nearly 17 per cent and 18.5 per cent respectively during this period, ACE Equity data shows.
Meanwhile, primary market activity is set to rebound in the coming week with at least four companies planning to raise a total of about ₹15,000 crore ($1.7 billion) via IPOs, reports suggest. Some prominent ones include Kalpataru, Ellenbarrie Industrial Gases, and Globe Civil Projects.
HDB Financial Services Ltd., a unit of India's biggest private lender HDFC Bank, is also planning to launch its $1.4 billion IPO on June 25, reports suggest. This will be one of the biggest IPOs since Hyundai Motor India IPO in October 2024 that raised over Rs 27,000 crore.
Capex theme
The focus in the Indian market since the budget announcement on February 1, Wood wrote, has rotated to playing consumption rather than investment, helped by the monetary easing context with consumer finance stocks rallying sharply. The property market, now in its 5th year of an upturn, has further to run, he believes.
'Pre-sales growth of the top seven developers covered by Jefferies is forecast to accelerate to 22 per cent YoY in FY26 after slowing to 17 per cent YoY in fiscal year 2024-25 (FY25) ended March 31, a four year low. A lower mortgage rate, now at 8 per cent and expected to fall to 7.5 per cent when the latest Reserve Bank of India (RBI) rate cuts are passed on, should help boost sales in the affordable and mid-income segments,' he said.
Portfolio rejig
Wood has also rejigged his India portfolio, with the investments in Larsen & Toubro, Thermax and Godrej Properties will be removed and replaced by investments in TVS Motor, Home First Finance and Manappuram Finance, with four percentage points each.
An additional one percentage point each will be added to the existing investments in PolicyBazaar and Bharti Airtel, he said.
The investment in Larsen & Toubro in the global long-only equity portfolio has been replaced by an investment in Saint-Gobain, a French construction materials company. In the Asia ex-Japan long-only portfolio, too, the investment in Larsen & Toubro will be removed and replaced by an investment in PolicyBazaar, he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump tariff turbulence: Tiruppur knitwear lifeline stretched thin
Trump tariff turbulence: Tiruppur knitwear lifeline stretched thin

Business Standard

timean hour ago

  • Business Standard

Trump tariff turbulence: Tiruppur knitwear lifeline stretched thin

The clatter of knitting machines is the pulse of Tiruppur, each metallic click and hum carrying the livelihoods of nearly 1.2 million people, directly or indirectly tied to the textile and apparel trade. The faintly sweet scent of cotton in the air, sometimes replaced by the pungent tang from dyeing units, is as much a part of daily life as the morning tea. But lately, the streets wear a different mood. The industry's outward resilience masks an undercurrent of unease. In this corner of Tamil Nadu, more than 12,500 kilometres from the Oval Office, the trade moves in Washington are sending tremors through shop floors. Relatively high 50 per cent US tariffs on Indian goods threaten orders, revenues, and hundreds of thousands of jobs. 'Tiruppur is like a phoenix — we will rise from the ashes,' say exporters in almost unison. It is a familiar refrain in a town that has survived crises before: The closure of dyeing units in 2010–11, the GST blues of 2017, the Covid-led collapse of 2019, raw material shortages, wars. 'Even if we lose 50 per cent of our US revenue, that's about ₹6,000 crore. With trade deals with the European Union and the United Kingdom, we can replace it,' says K M Subramanian, president of the Tiruppur Exporters' Association and promoter of KM Knitwear, as devotional chants of Om Namah Shivaya play softly in his office, giving a sense of clam. But that calm confidence isn't infectious: Many believe the next six months will decide survival — if the 50 per cent tariff stays. Tiruppur, the knitwear capital of India, along with nearby Coimbatore, accounted for 69 per cent, or around ₹44,747 crore, of India's total knitwear exports worth ₹65,178 crore in 2024-25. Of that, the US market, based on industry estimates, claimed over ₹13,000 crore. Now, with the Donald Trump administration's higher tariff move, exporters expect US shipments to halve, crippling a sector where more than 80 per cent of companies are the micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) with an annual revenue of less than ₹100 crore. Hence, one could see two worlds in one city: One where companies are holding their breath for an 'Indian trump card' to solve the tariff war; the other betting on diversification and the new openings in the EU and UK. Inside the modest, paint-peeling office of the Tiruppur Exporters and Manufacturers Association (Teama), president M Muthurathinam voices the bleaker view. 'There are MSMEs that are 100 per cent dependent on the US. They will be wiped out. Diversion of orders will take six months to a year; we need incentives to survive,' he says. Teama's membership, comprising mostly small companies with less than ₹10 crore turnover, has fallen from 1,200 before Covid to around 700 now. Retail giants -- Walmart, Target, Amazon, TJX, Kohl's, Gap, H&M -- have told Indian suppliers to pause shipments until tariff details are clear. 'We're seeing not just holding of orders but also cancellations. One of my US customers, too, has dropped orders for summer 2026,' says N Thirukkumaran, chairman of Esstee Exports India. Around 700,000 people depend directly on the sector here, and another half-million indirectly, including 300,000 migrant workers from Odisha, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Jharkhand, and Bihar. Industry groups are pushing for a special jobs package. For US brands, too, relocating sourcing isn't easy. Bangladesh and Vietnam can't instantly absorb large orders. 'Tiruppur works on wafer-thin margins,' says R Senthil Kumar of Premier Agencies. They are around 5 per cent in the US market, versus up to 25 per cent in Europe, according to Teama. Subramanian notes that brands have long-established supply chains here. 'Shifting will disrupt sourcing from Japan, Vietnam, and elsewhere. US customers will end up paying more.' For some, the damage has already been done. G R Senthilvel of Polo Castle shut his unit and sold ancestral property to clear ₹2.25 crore in debt after years of setbacks -- demonetisation, introduction of GST, rising costs, and global slowdown. 'We need an immediate package from the government, support from the banking sector, and handholding to find new markets like the EU, UK, or even Africa,' says Senthilvel. Africa, many agree, offers promise but comes with banking risks, outside of South Africa and a few others. MSMEs need a one-year breathing space with packages, tax breaks, and relaxed banking rules, demands Senthil Kumar of JM Knits and Weaves. 'Without six months' stability, we won't survive.' Some have sidestepped the storm by focusing inward. S Sathasivam's Horse Club unit thrives in the domestic market, which brought in about ₹35,000 crore last financial year. But even here, cotton price hikes are pushing a shift to polyester. 'It's a huge crisis for hubs like Tiruppur. We need price control on raw materials,' he says. As the road out of town grows quieter, the rhythmic thump of knitting machines fades, but the 1.2 million heartbeats they power seem to echo in unison: 'Tiruppur needs a stitch in time'.

Nepal PM KP Sharma Oli likely to visit India next month: Report
Nepal PM KP Sharma Oli likely to visit India next month: Report

India Today

timean hour ago

  • India Today

Nepal PM KP Sharma Oli likely to visit India next month: Report

Nepali Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli is likely to pay an official visit to India from September 16-17, Foreign Ministry sources said in Kathmandu on Monday.A wide range of issues, such as trade, tourism, information technology, connectivity, hydropower and border, will be discussed during the visit, they Foreign Ministry is currently working towards finalising the agenda and itinerary for the proposed high-level visit, said the Foreign Minister's Press Advisor Ek Raj On Monday, Foreign Minister Arzu Rana Deuba, who would be part of Oli's delegation, said that direct flights between Nepalgunj and Delhi will be on "top" of her agenda during the upcoming visit to India."Direct air connectivity between Nepalgunj, a Western Nepal city, and New Delhi will be my top agenda," Deuba said at a meeting with political leaders, lawmakers and industrialists at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs."If this happens, it will certainly change the face of Western Nepal," she said, adding that the government has already done the necessary groundwork to strengthen the necessary infrastructure in the area for the people from around 25 districts of Western Nepal will benefit from the proposed direct flight between Nepalgunj and Delhi, Deuba can be the gateway to Kailash-Mansarovar situated in Tibet if we start direct flights between Nepalgunj and Delhi, she proposed flight between the two cities will benefit the people of both countries, she pointed shares a border of over 1,850 km with five Indian states – Sikkim, West Bengal, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Nepal relies heavily on India for the transportation of goods and is also important for India in the context of its overall strategic interests in the region, and the leaders of the two countries have often noted the age-old 'Roti Beti' relationship.- EndsMust Watch

Trump Slaps Tariffs, India Hits Back: From McDonald, Coca-Cola To iPhones, A Nationalist Boycott Storm Brews
Trump Slaps Tariffs, India Hits Back: From McDonald, Coca-Cola To iPhones, A Nationalist Boycott Storm Brews

India.com

timean hour ago

  • India.com

Trump Slaps Tariffs, India Hits Back: From McDonald, Coca-Cola To iPhones, A Nationalist Boycott Storm Brews

New Delhi: A wave of calls to ditch American brands is sweeping across parts of India. From McDonald's and Coca-Cola to Amazon and Apple, household names from the United States are finding themselves at the centre of a boycott campaign, Reuters reported. The push comes as business leaders and supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi rally against Washington's steep new trade duties. India's vast consumer base has long been fertile ground for U.S. companies. McDonald's outlets are dotted across the country. Coke and Pepsi dominate beverage shelves in both small-town stores and urban supermarkets. Apple store openings attract long queues. Starbucks offers discounted treats to crowds of loyal customers. WhatsApp, which is owned by Meta, has more users in India than anywhere else in the world. Domino's runs more outlets here than in any other country. Now, anger is simmering after former U.S. President Donald Trump slapped a 50% tariff on Indian goods. The decision has unsettled exporters and sparked tension between New Delhi and Washington. While there is no clear sign of sales declines, the rhetoric against American imports is getting louder, both online and on the streets. Manish Chowdhary, co-founder of Wow Skin Science, posted a video on LinkedIn urging shoppers to back Indian farmers and startups. He called for 'Made in India' to become a global obsession and cited South Korea's global reputation for food and beauty products. 'We have lined up for products from thousands of miles away. We have proudly spent on brands that we do not own, while our own makers fight for attention in their own country,' he said, as cited by the news agency. Rahm Shastry, CEO of DriveU, a service that provides drivers on call, added his voice on LinkedIn. 'India should have its own home-grown Twitter/Google/YouTube/WhatsApp/FB like China has,' he wrote. Indian companies already challenge foreign brands at home, particularly in retail and food. Still going global has remained an uphill climb. In technology, though, Indian IT firms such as TCS and Infosys serve clients across continents. Speaking in Bengaluru on Sunday, Prime Minister Modi called for greater self-reliance. 'Indian technology companies make products for the world but now is the time for us to give more priority to India's needs,' he said, without naming any firm. Even as boycotts gathered steam, Tesla opened its second showroom in the country on Monday in New Delhi. The launch drew both Indian commerce ministry officials and U.S. embassy representatives. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) affiliate Swadeshi Jagran Manch staged rallies nationwide on Sunday. The group urged shoppers to switch to Indian alternatives and circulated a WhatsApp list of domestic brands, from soaps to cold drinks. 'People are now looking at Indian products. It will take some time to fructify. This is a call for nationalism and patriotism,' said group's Co-Convenor Ashwani Mahajan. On social media, the group's 'Boycott foreign food chains' graphics display logos of McDonald's and other international restaurants. In Lucknow, 37-year-old Rajat Gupta sat at a McDonald's on Monday, sipping a cup of coffee worth Rs 49. He brushed off the protests. 'Tariffs are a matter of diplomacy and my McPuff, coffee should not be dragged into it,' the report has quoted him as saying.

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