Latest news with #VikashKumarJain


CNBC
2 days ago
- Business
- CNBC
CNBC's Inside India newsletter: Wall Street and investors turn bullish on India after two turbulent quarters
Having overcome fears of the India-Pakistan conflict, Indian markets might lose its temporary status as a "safe haven" market if the U.S. and China come to a deal. Those worries and a concoction of other factors — inflation, earnings disappointments — have led to lackluster performance for equities so far this year. The Nifty 50 is up 4.7% so far this year, and investors are likely to have welcomed the sideways move by the benchmark in May with a sigh of relief, in fact. But the tide may be about to turn as Wall Street analysts and investors turn bullish. The Indian market is currently one of the most expensive globally, trading at over 20% premiums to its 20-year average price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, which limits the potential for significant Nifty benchmark upside, according to analysts at CLSA. "After the recent rally, the Indian market has again inched up to become nearly the most expensive market in the world," said CLSA's Vikash Kumar Jain in a note to clients. Goldman Sachs strategists echoed that point, saying the MSCI India index "does not look favourable" even when adjusting for a stronger growth potential. Wonks over at Morgan Stanley took a similar view of the stock market's recent performance. "Since September 2024, the market has digested an unprecedented amount of bad news – excessive valuations in [small and mid-cap] and a sharp correction in the broad market pointing to a slowdown in macro growth and earnings, US tariff-related volatility and a major terrorist attack along with India's response with the large-cap indexes about 5% from all-time highs and almost negligible changes in implied volumes," said the Wall Street bank's Ridham Desai. Norma analyst Saion Mukherjee also noted that most companies beat expectations for the latest quarter, but only because the expectations had been lowered significantly. Yet, every single one of those market participants has turned bullish over the past couple of weeks. Goldman Sachs raised its price target for the Nifty 50 to 26,200. Nomura similarly sees the index at 26,140. Even long-time cautious bears such as Bernstein's Venugopal Garre, who has been right in cautioning investors over rich valuations in the small and mid-cap sectors (SMID), are now rethinking their outlook. "They've been in a bubble zone for a while — a point we've never hesitated stating," said Garre. "The reality is this: the SMID bubbles have let go of a lot of froth and are broadly valued in line with recent history. Not cheap, and not exorbitant." And it's not just strategists, analysts and advisors turning around. Money managers are also echoing the same sentiment. "A lot of people look at India and have said, 'Gosh, the valuations are enormous,'" said Andrew Dalrymple, chief investment officer at Aubrey Capital Management. "If you took that view, you'd never buy an Indian equity. You would have missed an enormous opportunity in the last five years." Aubrey Global Emerging Markets Strategy, which manages more than $500 million in assets, has 35% of its fund allocated to India, its largest allocation. "We try to reconcile valuation of the price earnings-to-growth ratio, and say when we look at an Indian company, it might nominally have that high P/E but we then say this is justified by price-to-growth ratio, which we try to keep at less than 1.5 times," Dalrymple added. "And that way, we find we have been able to exploit some extremely successful, very, very profitable investment opportunities over the years." Dalrymple's sentiment is also reflected in the data. Foreign institutional investors have been net buyers of Indian equities over the past two months. Yet, it's off a low base, suggesting a significant upside in an ideal scenario. Morgan Stanley's Desai noted that "foreign portfolios positioning is the weakest since we have had the data in 2000, and there are early signs that their view on India is shifting." Amid all the sudden bullishness, however, many investors have learned a thing or two over the past year and are approaching with caution. "This is likely to be a stock pickers' market, in contrast to one driven by top-down or macro factors since the Covid pandemic," Desai said in a note to clients on June 2. Financials, often viewed as a leveraged bet on the future of a nation, appear to be a favorite among many. In the large-cap space, Axis Bank was a top pick for Nomura and Goldman Sachs, with ICICI Bank seen favorably by Morgan Stanley, CLSA and JP Morgan. India's economy expands more than expected. Gross domestic product in the quarter ended March grew 7.4%. That figure's much higher than the 6.7% expected by a Reuters poll of economists and the fastest rate of quarterly expansion for fiscal year 2025, according to government data released Friday. For the full fiscal year, India's economy expanded by 6.5%, in line with the government's February estimate. U.S. authorities are reportedly investigating Adani's companies. Prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Brooklyn are looking into whether Gautam Adani's companies have been importing liquefied petroleum gas from Iran into India, according to the Wall Street Journal. A spokesperson for the Adani group "categorially denies" the allegations. Reserve Bank of India expected to cut rates two more times. That's according to Chetan Ahya, chief Asia economist at Morgan Stanley, who said that the RBI should be comfortable with two more rate cuts in the current economic climate because India's "growth conditions will still be reasonable" and inflation is likely to remain below 4%. Air travel by Indian nationals could cause the aviation industry to skyrocket. India is the third-largest air travel market in the world, Air India CEO Campbell Wilson told CNBC's Monica Pitrelli at the World Air Transport Summit over the weekend. "So if Indians start traveling... at the intensity of China, it's going to absolutely explode in volume internationally," Wilson Nifty 50 has stayed absolutely flat, so far this week. The index has risen 4.7% this year. The benchmark 10-year Indian government bond yield moved lower by 3 basis points compared to last week. On CNBC TV this week, Anubhuti Sahay, head of India economics research at Standard Chartered Bank, said that India's fiscal fourth-quarter economic expansion was "much higher than anyone of us expected" because of growth in net indirect taxes. However, that number can "keep on fluctuating" and eventually fade, so India's gross domestic product will likely return to the trend of 6.5%. The bank's full-year forecast for India's financial year 2026 is 6.6%. Meanwhile, APEC President of Marriott International Rajeev Menon said that India is "one of the most strategic markets in the world" for the hotel chain. Menon pointed out that occupancy growth is driven by secondary and tertiary cities as much as demand from bigger cities like New Delhi and Bangalore, which suggests that the India's rising middle class is a revenue opportunity for central bank will announce its interest rate decision Friday, when it is expected to lower rates by 25 basis points to 5.75%, according to LSEG data. The country will also be releasing data on its consumer inflation rate for May next Thursday. Meanwhile, Ganga Bath Fittings, a manufacturer of bathroom accessories, lists Wednesday. June 6: Reserve Bank of India interest rate decision June 11: Ganga Bath Fittings IPO June 12: India consumer price index for May
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
13-05-2025
- Business
- Business Standard
Markets fall after posting biggest single-day gain in four years
Domestic equity benchmarks suffered their steepest single-day drop in over a month on Tuesday, dragged down by profit booking and concerns that foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) may redirect funds to China and US following trade tariff truce. The sharp decline came a day after the indices posted their biggest single-day gains in four years. The Sensex closed at 81,148, down 1,282 points, or 1.5 per cent, while the Nifty settled at 24,578, shedding 346 points, or 1.4 per cent. This marked the worst performance for both the indices since April 7. While largecaps slumped, the broader market showed resilience. The Nifty Midcap 100 inched up 0.2 per cent, and the Nifty Smallcap 100 rose 0.8 per cent. Overall, the BSE-listed firms saw a ₹1.5 trillion drop in market capitalisation, settling at ₹431 trillion. It had risen over ₹16 trillion in the preceding session. On Monday, the US and China agreed to slash reciprocal trade tariffs for 90 days. The US will reduce duties on Chinese imports from 145 per cent to 30 per cent, while China will cut its tariffs on US goods from 125 per cent to 10 per cent. Analysts fear the easing of trade tensions could divert FPI flows away from India. In April, India had emerged as a safe haven amid global trade uncertainties, attracting foreign investments. "It appears that (the) Indian market has shed its fears regarding the India-Pakistan conflict, but a China-US trade deal may reduce the relative attractiveness of India," analysts led by Vikash Kumar Jain of CLSA said on Tuesday. "Rising fears of global trade disruptions since March made India the place to hide for foreign investors. However the receding fears may drive a shift in FIIs towards China," CLSA analysts added. 'The relief-driven surge, fuelled by easing global and domestic risks, including reduced trade war tensions and Indo-Pak geopolitical stress, appears to be taking a breather. This consolidation is primarily affecting largecap stocks, while mid and smallcap segments continue to gain traction,' said Vinod Nair, head of research at Geojit Financial Services. Going forward, the remainder of earnings season, FPI flows, stable monsoons, and potential trade deals with the US will provide further momentum to the market rally. "A remarkable feature of Q4 earnings that we've been seeing so far isn't exceptional earnings. In fact, we are seeing a marginal slowing at a broader level. What we've successfully avoided is the worst-case earnings projections that resulted from the continuous downgrades since September last year. Each sector has seen its mix of cuts and resilience,' said Bernstein in a note. The note added that the markets are positioned well. However, volatility will persist, and a linear rise in Nifty is unlikely. "Macro will stay resilient with improved liquidity, lower rates, better government capex spends, rural demand and support from tax cuts helping reduce earnings risks," the note said. The market breadth was strong with 2,559 stocks advancing and 1,402 declining. HDFC Bank, which declined 1.76 per cent, was the biggest drag on the Sensex, followed by Infosys, which fell 3.5 per cent. FPIs on Tuesday were net sellers worth ₹477 crore, and domestic institutions bought shares worth ₹4,274 crore.