Business Standard

Only 14% households in India exposed to equities

- PUNEET WADHWA

The exposure of Indian households to equity assets is among the lowest in the world at 14 per cent, according to a September 2 report by Motilal Oswal Securities. At the other extreme is the US, where the exposure stands at 45.5 per cent, followed by Spain, Canada, and China.

The report analysed the data from 15 countries for calendar year 2019 (CY19) for all countries except China (CY16), Taiwan (CY18), and India (FY19).

“Notably, the risk appetite of American households is the highest, compared to their counterpar­ts in several other major nations. Canada and Spain are the only two other economies, where households have an exposure of more than a third of their total financial assets into equities,” wrote Nikhil Gupta and Yaswi Agarwal of Motilal Oswal Securities in the note.

Total financial assets of US households, according to the report, amounted to $94 trillion, or around 440 per cent of their gross domestic product (GDP) as of Cy19-end. As much as 46 per cent ($43 trillion) of all financial assets (on outstandin­g basis) were held in equity shares (corporate, non-corporate or mutual funds). Another 32 per cent was in the form of longterm/retirement assets, such as insurance and pension entitlemen­ts (I&PES) and only about 14 per cent were held in deposits, their findings suggest.

“The share of equities in household financial assets has risen almost continuous­ly from its near all-time trough of 33 per cent in 2008 to 45.5 per cent in 2019, marking the highest rate since 1972,” Gupta and Agarwal said.

Given this high exposure, dividends received from equity ownership has also affected personal disposable income (PDI). In fact, the share of these dividends had increased to an all-time high of over 7 per cent of PDI in CY19, beating the previous high of 6.8 per cent in CY08.

Having suffered one of the most testing periods due to the Covid-19-triggered lockdowns last quarter that brought economic activity in most countries to a near halt, global financial markets have continued to gain ground on the back of liquidity infusion by central banks. On a yearto-date (YTD) basis, while Indian markets have lost nearly 6 per cent, key US indices — the Nasdaq Composite, S&P 500, and the Dow Jones — have gained 54-74 per cent.

Going ahead, most analysts expect the global equity markets to remain supported by the liquidity injected to stem the economic fallout of Covid-19. As an investment strategy, Christophe­r Wood, global head (equity strategy) at Jefferies, for instance, suggests equity investors maintain a barbell strategy of owning both growth and value stocks.

“Growth stocks have resumed the relative outperform­ance of laste because of the renewed second wave concerns. But when V-shaped recovery talk hits the market, and the pressure comes on Pivot, it will be the cyclical stocks that outperform again. That renewed move in cyclicals should also lead to renewed outperform­ance by Europe and Japan, given the greater cyclical gearing of their benchmark indices,” he wrote in a recent note to investors, GREED & fear.

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