Business Standard

‘Market gives steady compoundin­g return in mid-to-long term’

March 2021 quarter corporate earnings and the second wave of Covid have kept the markets busy over the past few weeks. MANISH GUNWANI, Cio-equity investment­s at Nippon India Mutual Fund, tells Puneet Wadhwa in an interview that though reduced activity is

- MANISH GUNWANI Cio-equity investment­s, Nippon India MF More on business-standard.com

The markets have been relatively resilient in the wake of the second Covid wave. Until when can this last? There are multiple reasons for this apparent disconnect. First, the Indian stock market is not only about India — a fair bit of earnings come from sectors linked to the global economy (IT, pharma, commoditie­s etc) and this segment is doing pretty fine. Second, a lot of listed companies are gaining market share over smaller players. So even if the industry growth is slow, earnings of the listed universe are not getting affected that much. Finally, the markets discount the future and the general belief is this Covid phase will get over reasonably soon — the success of vaccines in some prominent nations has been a big factor in this view.

How are you navigating this uncertain phase?

Generally, our diversifie­d equity funds are benchmark-oriented and we do not believe in timing the market too much and do not take any big cash calls. The

market offers a steady compoundin­g return in the medium-to-long term. Hence, we are not changing our investment process too much.

How big a threat is inflation and other macro variables?

Inflation is probably the biggest threat to the global markets right now with commodity prices firming up. Most developed markets are witnessing employment levels going up, which may drive wages higher. For equities, inflation trending upwards but within the range of expectatio­ns can actually be a big positive as it helps earnings and may shift flows from bonds to equities. However, this can work to a certain level. If inflation overshoots expectatio­ns materially, it can be a big headwind as interest rates go up. From an Indian perspectiv­e, one silver lining is crude oil that is expected to be rangebound due to alternativ­es like renewable energy becoming costeffect­ive. Also, capacity utilisatio­n in

Do you expect earnings downgrades over the next couple of quarters?

While the Covid second wave has led to reduced activity and is likely to hit nearterm earnings of domestic sectors, the two-three year outlook on corporate earnings growth remains robust. A lot of sectors like banks, commoditie­s, telecom, and pharma have endured a down cycle in earnings during the long phase of 2015-2020. The striking feature of the last few quarters has been that despite the economy enduring a titanic challenge like Covid, earnings have surprised on the upside.

Do you see more headroom in the specialty chemicals and pharma space?

The shift of select manufactur­ing sectors from China to India continues to be a strong structural theme and chemicals/pharma are well placed to benefit from it, given the strong ecosystem built over many years. However, in general, stocks are expensive in these sectors but select a few may still offer steady compoundin­g from here.

Have metal stocks run up too fast, too soon?

INFLATION IS PROBABLY THE BIGGEST THREAT TO THE GLOBAL MARKETS RIGHT NOW WITH COMMODITY PRICES FIRMING UP”

The sensitivit­y of metal stocks to commodity prices tends to be high and added to that, most of them have significan­t debt on balance sheets. So in an upcycle, there is financial leverage as well. Given the ferocity of the rise in metal prices, naturally, stocks have run up quickly. While commodity prices are likely to cool down, the windfall profit metal companies are making will enable them to deleverage substantia­lly, which can improve their multiples. Some more upside is possible in the sector.

What’s your strategy for the BFSI segment?

It is quite natural that with a crisis like the Covid second wave, the outlook on asset quality worsens in the short term. Large private banks will be able to weather this storm much better than other segments and gain market share. Secondleve­l players not only have the issue of asset quality but also the fact that with technology becoming a big part of the competitiv­e edge, ability to make adequate investment­s and attract the right talent are becoming steep challenges.

 ??  ?? many sectors is still low, which may help control inflation.
many sectors is still low, which may help control inflation.

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