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INDIA PREFERRED AMONG ASIAN EQUITIES: MORGAN’S GARNER

India remains one of the preferred bets among Asian equities, says JONATHAN GARNER, chief Asia and emerging markets equity strategist, Morgan Stanley. Speaking to Samie Modak, he says global markets, including India, will continue to do well over the next

- JONATHAN GARNER Chief Asia & emerging markets equity strategist, Morgan Stanley

What is your assessment of the global rally?

A strong global economic recovery and earnings growth are causing equity markets worldwide to go up. Some, including India, are going up faster than others. We expect corporate earnings will grow in the mid-teens, year on year, for the All-Country World Index, a global benchmark.

Indian stocks have rallied 20 per cent in six months. How should investors play the market now?

We like the market, but it has already given an exceptiona­l 20 per cent return in the last six months. Returns will moderate to around 10 per cent over the next six months. Hopefully, we are right that earnings will continue to come through and there is an upside surprise in relation to earnings. We will tell investors if the situation starts to deteriorat­e. At least till the second half of this year we do not think it will. Investors then will have to keep an eye on what central banks do, particular­ly the US Federal Reserve.

India has not seen any significan­t uptick in earnings and the economy…

The economy is showing signs of life. Corporate earnings are in the cusp of showing improvemen­t. But there has been a number of one-offs that have impacted earnings. Demonetisa­tion has been one such and there have been specific corporate one-offs. But going ahead we will see very strong earnings growth. Earnings will be growing in the year ending March 2018 at 18 per cent, year on year. So at 16.5 times on our earnings number, you get a Sensex target of 34,000. We also think the rupee will be stable, if not stronger. So the dollar returns for the Indian market compare favourably.

What is your assessment of the government, which has completed three years?

There have been some concrete achievemen­ts like the goods and services tax. Foreign investors are concerned about demonetisa­tion, but it was needed. There has been an improvemen­t in land acquisitio­n regulation. There has been a big improvemen­t in foreign direct investment. The fiscal position has improved structural­ly. There is a lot that still needs to be done. We have not seen big-scale privatisat­ion. I understand why that may be difficult in some sectors. There have been some measures against corruption, but more may be needed. The overall proof of the improved situation is that the current account deficit is much smaller than what it used to be. The fiscal deficit and inflation are more under control. The savings rate is picking up. The Indian macro set-up now is the strongest in the emerging markets group.

What questions do global investors ask about India?

Investor sentiment towards India is positive. There have been concerns about the impact of demonetisa­tion. We argued that growth would snap back quickly. Also, some investors are worried about earnings not coming through. They are not so much concerned around India’s valuations. Some are concerned about export-facing sectors that used to do very well such as pharmaceut­icals and technology outsourcin­g, which may be becoming structural­ly impaired.

Which sectors in India are you most positive about?

There are key sectors that we want to own here like financials, consumer discretion­ary, industrial and technology. Continued urbanisati­on of the middle class will be good for consumer discretion­ary. Financials are in a sweet spot thanks to declining bad loans and rising loan growth. Technology is our contra call. We expect an upsurge in private capex spending, which will help technology. The US visa issue is overdone.

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