Business Standard

India at 8th spot in m-cap rankings

At $2.26 trillion, its stock market is bigger than those of Canada and Switzerlan­d, just behind Germany and France

- PAVAN BURUGULA

India has pipped Canada to become the world’s eighth largest stock market by capitalisa­tion.

This year’s 47 per cent surge in market capitalisa­tion has helped India seal its position in the $2-trillion club. It has also climbed two positions in the coveted league table.

At $2.26 trillion, the Indian stock market is now bigger than those of Canada and Switzerlan­d. It is 5.3 per cent and 12 per cent behind Germany and France, respective­ly.

Indian equities were among the best performing stocks globally in 2017, with benchmark indices gaining 33 per cent in dollar terms. This outperform­ance helped India increase its share in global market capitalisa­tion.

India now accounts for 2.46 per cent of the worldwide market cap, up from 2.28 per cent at the beginning of the year. “India is the most attractive market for foreign investors. We have one of the fastest growing economies and one of the largest consumer bases. India’s global rank is expected to improve as the market switches to a high-growth trajectory on a strong reforms push by the government,” said Dharmesh Mehta, managing director, Axis Capital.

With improvemen­ts in macroecono­mic indicators and a strong flow of funds from mutual funds, the current market buoyancy is expected to continue, according to analysts.

Gross domestic product (GDP) growth had fallen to 5.7 per cent in April-June. Since then other economic indicators, including factory output, inflation and exports, have shown signs of a rebound.

Experts said the slowdown was a one-time event on account of implementa­tion of the goods and services tax (GST) and growth would revive in the next two quarters.

“A recovery in earnings is expected in the next couple of quarters. The bank recapitali­sation announced by the government is expected to revive credit growth,” said UR Bhat, managing director, Dalton Capital Advisors.

Mutual funds are well placed to support market buoyancy. Mutual funds have made net share purchases of ~97,566 crore this year. Also, a sell-off by foreign portfolio investors has stalled as the economy and earnings show early signs of revival.

For the first time in three months, foreign portfolio investors turned net buyers as they purchased equities worth $304 million last month. Foreign portfolio investors have invested $5.8 billion in Indian stocks so far this year. “The outflow was not on account of local factors but due to the reduced risk appetite of foreign funds for emerging market equities. India is still attracting impressive foreign direct investment flows,” Mehta added.

This rise of India’s market position will help the country to attract more foreign portfolio investment as its weight in various exchange traded funds will increase. However, the inflows are dependent on the free-float market capitalisa­tion because passive funds use this as a benchmark for assigning weight.

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