Business Standard

STOCKS ENTER ‘CORRECTION’ZONE

Sensex slumps 3,686 points since January 29; Nifty50 down 1,132 points

- SAMIE MODAK Mumbai, 23 March

The Indian market has entered a ‘correction’ zone for the first time in 15 months. A 10 per cent drop from its recent high is termed as a correction.

On Friday, the benchmark BSE Sensex closed at 32,596, down 3,686 points, or 10.2 per cent, from its alltime closing high of 36,283 reached on January 29. The Nifty50 index has come off 1,131.95 points, or 10.2 per cent, to 9,998 during the period.

The latest correction has been due to fears of a global trade war after US President Donald Trump slapped import tariffs on China.

The fall in the Indian markets had started last month. The reasons being — rising interest rates in the US and the $2-billion fraud in the Indian banking sector. Also, the imposition of a 10 per cent tax on long-term capital gains (LTCG) and political uncertaint­y following the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s weak show in the recent by-polls have weighed on investors’ sentiment. A sharp jump in global oil prices is also a cause of concern.

“The market has been facing headwind since the beginning of February — be it the imposition of the LTCG (tax) or the much talked about banking fraud. This being a politicall­y busy year in India, volatility can stay high for an extended period. As they say ‘volatility is the friend of long-term investor’, this opportunit­y should be used by the participan­ts to accumulate quality businesses at reasonable valuations,” said Devang Mehta, head (equity advisory), Centrum Wealth Management.

“Volatility has expanded and the market is losing its grip due to escalating tensions of a trade war and spike in oil prices. The market corrected 10 per cent from its peak. The metal and banks stocks continue to be the laggards,” said Vinod Nair, head of research, Geojit Financial Services.

Globally, investors were seen pulling out of riskier assets such as equity and moving to safe-haven bets such as developed world bonds and gold.

“Concurrent­ly, trade war concerns are muddying the waters and are likely to keep volatility elevated and dampen the sentiment. If risk aversion returns and dollar funding conditions tighten, India’s fixed income and exchange rate markets are likely to be the most susceptibl­e to the brunt of adjustment. We reckon that the economy is prepared but not immune to unexpected global shocks,” according to a note by DBS.

The market had last tumbled 10 per cent or more in December 2016 following the Centre’s decision to scrap the high- denominati­on ~500 and ~1,000 currency notes. The decline, however, was followed by a sharp rebound. But this time the chances of such a vshaped recovery are less. The valuations of the market remain above its long-term average despite a sharp correction. India also trades at a premium valuation to its emerging market peers.

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