
India's corporate earnings growth stays weak, banks and IT firms disappoint
The Indian economy is expected to grow at a world-beating 6.5% in the current fiscal year and inflation has been low. Yet, sectors from banks to IT services are facing earnings pressure from pockets of weakness in domestic and global demand.
Aggregate profit growth for 38 of the Nifty 50 (.NSEI), opens new tab firms that have reported so far stood at just 7.5%, according to Motilal Oswal Financial Services. Jefferies said that full-year earnings per share estimates for 113 companies on the MSCI India index (.MIIN00000PUS), opens new tab have been trimmed by 1.7%, with growth now projected at 8%.
U.S. President Donald Trump's 25% tariff on shipments from India threatens to further cloud the outlook for export-heavy sectors. Trump has also warned of harsh tariffs over India's Russian oil imports—an action New Delhi called "unjustified."
Earnings growth for Indian companies has been in single digits for five consecutive quarters, below the 15%–25% growth seen between 2020–21 and 2023–24, which fueled a 160% surge in the Nifty 50 index (.NSEI), opens new tab.
Since the start of the fiscal year 2025, the Nifty has risen 10%.
"It's clear that the earnings momentum has stalled, with slower credit growth dragging down performance of financials. However, this isn't just a sectoral story—it reflects broader weakness in nominal growth," Avinash Gorakshakar, director of research at Profitmart Securities said.
Nominal GDP growth, which includes inflation, and is more relevant to corporate profitability, is seen staying below 10% for the third straight year.
"A real revival may take shape only in the second half of FY2026—if credit growth revives, private capex kicks in, and a good monsoon boosts rural demand. Until then, the benchmarks are likely to remain rangebound," said Gorakshakar.
Banks — the heaviest sector in the Nifty — delivered mixed results in the June quarter.
Lenders reported lower margins following steep policy interest rate cuts and as bad loans in segments such as consumer loans, credit cards and microfinance started to rise.
IT firms, the second-largest sector in the Nifty, also saw a subdued quarter amid persistent demand weakness from the U.S., a key market.
There were a few bright spots in the June-quarter earnings, with auto, cement, and select infrastructure companies meeting or beating expectations.
Analysts lowered their full-year profit forecasts for more companies, though the number of downgrades was lower than in the previous three quarters.
"The earnings engine is clearly sputtering. Margin strain in banks, tepid global IT demand, and weak nominal growth have stalled profit momentum," said Samrat Dasgupta, chief executive of Esquire Capital Investment Advisors.
"Until credit and consumption revive meaningfully, markets may find little earnings firepower to break higher."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
30 minutes ago
- Reuters
US tariff threat to keep rupee on the ropes ahead of RBI rate call
MUMBAI, August 6 (Reuters) - The Indian rupee is likely to remain under pressure ahead of the central bank's interest rate decision on Wednesday, after nearing an all-time low following President Donald Trump's fresh threats of steep tariffs on Indian goods. The 1-month non-deliverable forward suggests the rupee will open slightly weaker against the U.S. dollar from Tuesday's level of 87.80. The currency dropped as much as 87.8850 on Tuesday, just shy of its record low of 87.95 hit in February. Bankers said the rupee avoided hitting a fresh lifetime low, thanks to likely dollar sales by the Reserve Bank of India through state-run banks. The central bank had to step in after the rupee slid following Trump's threat of substantial tariffs on Indian goods over Russian oil purchases. "The RBI probably wanted to avoid headlines about the rupee hitting a new low on the same day Trump was ramping up tariffs," an FX trader at a private bank said. "87.90–88 is the key zone to watch. If the RBI does cut rates today, we'll most likely break past that, and the central bank may allow some weakness." About three-quarters of the 57 participants in a Reuters poll expect the RBI to leave the policy rate unchanged at 5.50%. The rest anticipate a 25-basis point cut, following a larger-than-expected 50-bp reduction in June. Citibank, ANZ, DBS, State Bank of India and ICICI Bank are among those expecting a rate cut. At the previous policy, SBI was the only one to predict a 50-bps reduction. Monetary policy operates with lags, and postponing a rate cut until inflation falls further or growth weakens more visibly could result in deeper and more persistent economic damage, SBI said in a note. "We expect RBI to continue frontloading with a 25 bps cut in August policy." KEY INDICATORS: ** One-month non-deliverable rupee forward at 87.94; onshore one-month forward premium at 11.25 paise ** Dollar index up at 98.78 ** Brent crude futures up 0.6% at $68.1 per barrel ** Ten-year U.S. note yield at 4.22% ** As per NSDL data, foreign investors sold a net $224.9 million worth of Indian shares on August 4 ** NSDL data shows foreign investors bought a net $45.9 million worth of Indian bonds on August 4


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
TPG to buy Australian automotive software firm Infomedia for over $420 million
Aug 6 (Reuters) - Australia's Infomedia ( opens new tab said on Wednesday it had agreed to be acquired by the Asia-focused private equity arm of asset manager TPG (TPG.O), opens new tab for an equity value of A$651 million ($421.33 million). Under the deal, shareholders in the ASX-listed firm would receive A$1.72 per share, reflecting a more than 30% premium as compared to the stock's closing price on Tuesday. Infomedia shares rose nearly 28% in early trade on Wednesday to reach A$1.6875, their highest level since September last year. Infomedia provides "software as a service" (SaaS) solutions for the global automotive and motor service sector, offering clients data-driven solutions. It counts global carmakers BMW ( opens new tab, Audi, and Cadillac among its customers, according to its website. The A$1.72 per-share offer sits close to what was offered for the firm back in 2022 by potential suitors from the United States. The cash consideration reflects an enterprise value of A$579 million, the company said, adding that its board had endorsed TPG's bid. TPG Asia co-head Joel Thickins said Infomedia would join the private equity fund's existing global software investments worth $24 billion in firms including Wind River and McAfee. Infomedia is also allowed to pay its shareholders a fully-franked dividend of up to 2 Australian cents per share for fiscal 2025 and a further special dividend of up to 2.9 Australian cents apiece. The deal needs Foreign Investment Review Board's (FIRB) approval and Infomedia said a shareholder vote should be held by mid-November. ($1 = 1.5451 Australian dollars)


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Vietnam July exports up 16% y/y, industrial production up 8.5%
HANOI, Aug 6 (Reuters) - Vietnam's exports in July rose 16% from a year earlier to $42.27 billion, while industrial production increased by an annual 8.5%, government data showed on Wednesday. Imports in July rose 17.8% to $40 billion, resulting in a trade surplus of $2.27 billion for the month, the National Statistics Office said in a report. For the first seven months of this year, exports rose 14.8% over the same period of 2024 to $262.44 billion, while imports were up 17.9% to $252.26 billion, translating into a trade surplus of $10.18 billion. The government said on Monday that imports and exports both increased sharply because firms were ramping up production to meet new orders. Goods from Vietnam, a regional manufacturing powerhouse, have been slapped with a 20% tariff in the United States by the Trump administration. The United States was Vietnam's largest export market over the January-July period, with shipments totalling $85.1 billion, the NSO said. China was Vietnam's largest source of imports, with a value of $101.5 billion. Consumer prices in July rose 3.19% from a year earlier, the NSO said, adding that retail sales in July were up 9.2%.