logo
Expert view: Nifty EPS may grow at a 13% CAGR over FY25–FY27, says Anil Rego of Right Horizons PMS

Expert view: Nifty EPS may grow at a 13% CAGR over FY25–FY27, says Anil Rego of Right Horizons PMS

Mint14-07-2025
Expert view: Anil Rego, the founder and fund manager at Right Horizons PMS, believes the Nifty 50 EPS may grow at a CAGR of nearly 13 per cent over FY25–FY27, making the case for moderate, earnings-driven gains over the medium term. In an interview with Mint, Rego shared his expectations for Q1 earnings and said he is positive about banking, defence, and consumer discretionary sectors, among others, at this juncture. Edited excerpts:
Following a sluggish start, Indian markets witnessed a notable recovery in June, spurred by a combination of supportive global developments and decisive domestic policy actions.
The Reserve Bank of India's 50 bps rate cut and a 100 bps reduction in the CRR, alongside a 9 per cent monsoon surplus and easing oil prices, have improved liquidity and sentiment.
This led to a sharp uptick in rate-sensitive sectors like financials, real estate, and autos, with broader markets outperforming large caps.
Globally, while risk sentiment has improved post-ceasefire in the Middle East, geopolitical fragility, policy uncertainty in the US, and tariff tensions remain key overhangs.
Despite these risks, corporate earnings remain resilient, and consensus expects Nifty EPS to grow at a CAGR of nearly 13 per cent over FY25–FY27.
This supports the case for moderate, earnings-driven gains over the medium term.
The US tariff risk is a growing concern for Indian markets, especially after India announced retaliatory tariffs on US steel and aluminium at the WTO.
While the risk remains sector-specific for now, impacting exports like IT, pharma, and metals, it does not yet pose a threat of prolonged economic pain due to India's strong domestic fundamentals.
However, if trade tensions escalate further, it could hurt earnings in export-oriented sectors and trigger FPI outflows.
The Q1FY26 earnings season is expected to show early signs of recovery, but it may not mark a broad-based turnaround just yet.
While some sectors are poised to outperform, others are likely to face lingering challenges, suggesting that the worst may be behind us selectively, not uniformly.
Banking sector: Banks are expected to report muted earnings growth due to margin compression from the RBI's recent repo rate cuts, seasonally weak fee income, and elevated credit costs, particularly in unsecured and agri loan segments.
However, the outlook improves from the second half of the financial year (H2FY26), with expectations of improved loan growth, easing deposit costs, and declining slippages.
IT sector: The IT sector is likely to report mixed revenue growth. Tier-1 IT companies may post flat to marginally negative constant-currency (CC) growth, with only a few companies expected to grow sequentially.
Mid-tier firms are expected to do relatively better, driven by strength in BFSI, healthcare, and GenAI-led demand. The sector's deal pipeline remains healthy, and margin guidance is stable, indicating resilience despite macro headwinds.
The market outlook supports a selective sectoral approach, focusing on areas with strong earnings visibility, structural tailwinds, and valuation comfort.
Financials (banks & NBFCs)
Banks remain structurally positive, with asset quality stabilising and credit demand holding up. Margins may have peaked, but lower funding costs from RBI rate cuts should aid profitability from H2FY26.
NBFCs, especially in retail lending, gold loans, and vehicle finance, are expected to benefit from improved liquidity and demand recovery. Funding diversification and strong disbursement momentum support their outlook.
Public and private capex revival, strong order books, and government focus on infrastructure make this sector attractive.
Execution momentum is visible across electrification, construction equipment, and engineering segments, backed by rising investments and policy incentives.
A structural growth story driven by indigenous procurement (92 per cent of contracts awarded to Indian firms), record exports, and rising capex allocation.
Private players are gaining traction alongside DPSUs, supported by a ₹ 40,000 crore emergency procurement push.
Hospitals are showing robust growth in profitability, ARPOB, and occupancy rates. Expansion into tier-2 cities and the medical tourism potential offer multi-year tailwinds. Diagnostics and digital health initiatives continue to support earnings resilience.
Urban consumption remains healthy, aided by premiumisation and easing input costs. Value fashion, QSRs, electronics, and jewellery segments are doing well.
Tax relief and rural revival could further aid demand in H2FY26.
EMS firms are benefitting from PLI schemes, China+1 diversification, and rising demand for domestic electronics.
Strong capex, growing order books, and operating leverage suggest continued double-digit growth.
The Indian wealth management sector is at a pivotal inflection point, driven by the rapid rise of HNIs and ultra-HNIs.
Financial assets held by these segments are projected to grow from $1.2 trillion in 2023 to $2.2 trillion by 2028, reflecting strong wealth creation and rising financialization of assets.
Yet, only 15 per cent of India's financial wealth is professionally managed, compared to nearly 75 per cent in developed markets.
This vast gap presents a structural opportunity for PMS, AIFs, and advisory platforms to expand.
There appears to be selective value emerging in the IT sector, particularly among mid-tier companies, although the broader outlook remains cautious.
Early Q1FY26 earnings trends suggest that:
Tier-1 IT firms are expected to post muted revenue growth in constant currency terms, with flat to low-single-digit QoQ changes. Deal flow remains intact, but revenue conversion is lagging due to delayed decision-making by clients in the US and Europe.
Mid-cap IT players, however, are showing signs of resilience. They are benefitting from niche capabilities in areas like healthcare, engineering services, and AI-linked digital services.
Early previews indicate better execution and margin improvement from this segment.
From a valuation standpoint, the sector has derated and is trading closer to its long-term average.
While high-growth tailwinds of the pandemic years have faded, the sector offers reasonable entry points for long-term investors willing to ride out near-term demand uncertainty.
Cost efficiency, GenAI adoption, and vendor consolidation deals could drive outperformance for well-positioned firms.
As of June 2025, key indices like the Sensex are trading at nearly 24.7 times trailing PE and nearly 3.7 times P/B, which are above their 10-year averages.
This elevated valuation comes after a sharp June rally driven by the RBI's front-loaded rate cuts, falling crude prices, and foreign inflows.
In this context, a prudent equity investment strategy would involve:
Bottom-up stock selection: Focus on fundamentally strong companies with stable earnings visibility, robust cash flows, and sectoral tailwinds, particularly in financials, manufacturing, healthcare, and select midcap IT.
Maintain valuation discipline: Avoid chasing momentum in overvalued stocks or sectors. Seek opportunities where growth is not fully priced in, especially in sectors benefiting from reforms, PLI, or rising domestic demand.
Diversify across market caps: While large caps offer safety in uncertain times, select mid and small caps with solid fundamentals and reasonable valuations can provide alpha as the cycle broadens.
Use volatility to build exposure: Geopolitical risks, global rate uncertainty, and election-driven policies may trigger short-term corrections. These should be used to accumulate quality names rather than exiting in panic.
Read all market-related news here
Read more stories by Nishant Kumar
Disclaimer: This story is for educational purposes only. The views and recommendations expressed are those of the expert, not Mint. We advise investors to consult with certified experts before making any investment decisions, as market conditions can change rapidly and circumstances may vary.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Masterstroke by Mukesh Ambani as Reliance to invest Rs 4300000000 in Bengaluru-based startup, it deals in..., name is...
Masterstroke by Mukesh Ambani as Reliance to invest Rs 4300000000 in Bengaluru-based startup, it deals in..., name is...

India.com

time5 minutes ago

  • India.com

Masterstroke by Mukesh Ambani as Reliance to invest Rs 4300000000 in Bengaluru-based startup, it deals in..., name is...

Mukesh Ambani (File) In a significant decision which could provide a major boost to India's growing spacetech industry, Mukesh Ambani-led Reliance Industries is mulling to invest $50 million (about Rs 430 crore) in Digantara Research & Technologies, a Bengaluru-based spacetech startup, which is developing technology that can track objects in the Earth's orbit. How much is Mukesh Ambani Reliance Industries investing? According to a report by The Economic Times, Reliance Industries, India's most valued domestic firm led by billionaire Mukesh Ambani, is in advanced discussions to lead a Rs 430 crore funding round in Digantara, along with existing investors like Peak XV Partners. 'Reliance has evaluated multiple startups in the spacetech segment. It is looking at companies building novel solutions in the sector. Its talks with Digantara are at an advanced stage,' the report quoted a source familiar with the matter as saying. What does Digintara do? Co-founded by Anirudh Sharma (CEO), Rahul Rawat (COO), and Tanveer Ahmed (CTO), Digintara is a spacetech startup based in Bengaluru, working on the development of technologies which can track bjects in Earth's orbit. Earlier, in March, Digintara launched a satellite capable of tracking debris as small as 5 cm, and is currently providing services to defence agencies in both India and the United States, as per the report. According to the report, Digintara plans to deploy a constellation of about a dozen surveillance satellites by the end of 2026. The company has launched three satellites so far, one of which is part of the proposed satellite constellation. A major chunk of the upcoming funding round will be dedicated in developing and launching these satellites. 'Given the volatility in global geopolitics, every country is focused on having its own indigenous sovereign solutions that can be controlled in times of crisis. That's where the opportunity lies for startups like Digantara,' the report quoted a source as saying. The company established a manufacturing and operations facility in the US in February 2024, and expects to earn a revenue of $25–30 million (Rs 220–260 crore) from its US operation in the next 2-3 years.

US tariffs should not be cause for disengaging from trade talks, blocs
US tariffs should not be cause for disengaging from trade talks, blocs

Business Standard

time5 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

US tariffs should not be cause for disengaging from trade talks, blocs

The fundamental challenge for the Indian economy is to increase productivity and competitiveness premium Business Standard Editorial Comment Mumbai Listen to This Article The tariff rate of 25 per cent, which United States (US) President Donald Trump has decided will be applied to Indian exports to the US, may not, eventually, be the final rate. It may effectively wind up being higher if he carries out his threat to add a surcharge related to India's increasing purchases of Russian oil. It may be lower if New Delhi's negotiators pull some sort of a broader deal together. It is also worth remembering that there will be multiple exceptions to this headline tariff rate. Some goods that compose a large part of India-US trade —

Collaboration for future: Isro and India will benefit from Nasa
Collaboration for future: Isro and India will benefit from Nasa

Business Standard

time5 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Collaboration for future: Isro and India will benefit from Nasa

Artemis signup allows Isro and the fast-growing Indian aerospace sector to bid for Nasa tenders and the famously frugal Indian engineering sector could find opportunities there and pick up new skills Business Standard Editorial Comment Mumbai Listen to This Article The successful launch of the Nisar (Nasa-Isro Synthetic Aperture Radar) satellite from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre marks the second big mission where the two space agencies have joined hands, coming soon after gaganaut Shubhanshu Shukla travelled to the International Space Station on the Axiom 4 mission. This may be the precursor to more cooperation between the agencies, given that India in 2023 signed up for the Artemis Accords. The Artemis Accords provide a common set of principles for civil exploration and use of outer space. While both agencies benefit from cooperation, the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) may benefit

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