Business Standard

Will December be the month for bears?

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good companies have hit mid-cap status in the past 18 months. There have been 110 initial public offerings (IPOs) this financial year, raising around ~50,000 crore. But, that increases the liquid investible universe to around 600 stocks at best.

This presents a peculiar problem for fund managers. Funds cannot keep the bulk of their assets in cash, even if every fund manager of note admits privately (and some of them publicly) that valuations are stretched. Continuing inflows have forced them to buy into expensive PEs and also to overlook dubious fundamenta­ls and dodgy management practices.

Normally, stock valuations are linked to interest rates because prudent investors tend to compare earnings yield (this can be calculated as the inverse of the PE ratio) with debt yields. However, PEs of 30+ and 50+ make a mockery of this. Even though interest rates and treasury yields have fallen, the safe return from debt is far higher than earnings yields.

Where and how does this cycle end? Such a cycle creates bubbly conditions and eventually the buying could taper off. In that case, the bubble will deflate slowly. Or, there will be some major reversal of sentiment with investors selling out. In that case, the bubble will burst with a rapid crash because large redemption­s would force funds to sell their holdings.

Contrarian­s would guess the inflexion point is coming closer. The contrarian axiom states that, when everyone is bullish, everyone has also completed their buying and there is insufficie­nt demand to push prices up any more. Well, everyone seems to be bullish right now.

December is often a trigger month for outflows because FPIs tend to book profits at the end of their financial year. We’ve seen three per cent market swings in both directions in the past fortnight. A bigger downtrend could be sparked off if there's heavy FPI selling in the next two weeks. There could be all sorts of triggers ranging from unexpected policy decisions from any of the world's large central banks, to an upset win for the Congress in the Gujarat elections.

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