Business Standard

India pips EM peers on rising optimism

- SUNDAR SETHURAMAN & SAMIE MODAK Mumbai, 14 October

The domestic markets have raced ahead of their emerging market (EM) peers in the latest uptick seen in global equities triggered by optimism around the US stimulus package. Since last month’s lows on September 24, the Nifty has rallied 11 per cent. In comparison, the MSCI EM index has gained only 7.4 per cent. The top three weights on the index — China, Taiwan, and South Korea — have gained between 3.6 per cent and 5.3 per cent.

“We reckon three factors — a differenti­ated policy response, strong corporate action through the pandemic, and an attractive starting point of relative valuations, have helped India’s showing. For this outperform­ance to be sustained, India needs to continue delivering a policy that lifts its potential growth in the eyes of market participan­ts,” said Morgan Stanley strategist­s Ridham Desai and Sheela Rathi in a note India Outperform­ing EM, Finally.

Still, India’s year-to-date returns lag EMS by 360 basis points (bps). However, the latest upmove has helped close the gap. Until May, India was a major laggard; its returns trailed the MSCI EM index by over 1,000 bps.

With the IMF slashing India’s economic growth forecast further, some believe sustaining the outperform­ance could be tough. On Tuesday, the lender in its World Economic Outlook predicted that India’s GDP would shrink 10.3 per cent in the current fiscal year. In June, IMF had predicted a contractio­n of 4.5 per cent — the downgrade in outlook being the worst for a global economic powerhouse.

“Indices are rising on hopes that unlock measures will revive growth. The reduction in Covid cases has propped up sentiment. But the rally will be difficult to sustain because valuations are no longer sustainabl­e. Some firm recently said capacity utilisatio­n would be just above 50 per cent during the second half. If that’s the case, earnings will not improve. Further, there is consensus that the economy will shrink 9-10 per cent in FY21. Even though there will be a bounce-back, our absolute GDP in FY22 will be less than what it was in 2020,” said G Chokkaling­am, founder, Equinomics Research & Advisory.

The latest upmove has been underpinne­d by a revival in foreign portfolio investor flows. Also, buying in sectors such as banking and informatio­n technology — which have significan­t weighting on the benchmark indices — have helped propel gains.

Experts say the US election outcome could dictate flows into EMS.

“From now on, India’s performanc­e will largely be in line with other EMS. Overseas flows into the EMS will continue if Joe Biden gets elected. Biden’s election will reduce tensions with China, and there will be more fund flows into Asia and China. India will get a part of the flows according to its weight. But we will not be a big beneficiar­y even if global trade picks up,” said Andrew Holland, CEO of Avendus Capital Alternate Strategies.

After the latest upmove, benchmark indices are only 3 per cent shy of a new lifetime high. However, valuations — as measured by the priceto-earnings and the price-to-book ratio — are in the expensive territory.

“Return correlatio­ns across stocks with the equity market have risen to levels from where they tend to ‘mean revert’. This means we have exited a macro market and entered a stockpicke­rs market. The broad market looks very attractive versus the narrow market (Nifty and Sensex) and, hence, we like midcaps,” said Desai and Rathi.

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