Business Standard

Not in a hurry to add to overweight India stance; buy only on dip: Wood

- PUNEET WADHWA

India remains Asia’s best longterm structural story in terms of equities and investors should buy their favourite stocks on a decline, suggested Christophe­r Wood, global head of equity strategy at Jefferies, in his latest note to investors, GREED & fear.

However, the macro headwinds — the need to tighten monetary policy combined with the continuing risk, if not probabilit­y, of a much higher oil price — are the key reasons Wood is in no hurry to add to the ‘overweight’ position he has in Indian equities in his Asia ex-japan portfolio.

“GREED & fear had been expecting India to underperfo­rm in the Asian context in the first quarter of this year, as it probably would have done were it not for the further collapse in Chinese equities triggered by President Xi Jinping’s decision to double down on the Covid suppressio­n policy. This had also been the expectatio­n of foreign investors, which is why there was record foreign selling of Indian equities in the first quarter of this year,” Wood said.

Foreign investors in exit mode

Meanwhile, foreign investors, according to data, have sold a record net $13.5 billion worth of Indian equities in the first quarter of calendar year 2022 (Q1CY22) and another $3.8 billion in April. Of the total outflow of $17 billion seen over the last four quarters, according to a Jefferies note, active funds (India-dedicated and Non-dedicated) accounted for a large portion of this outflow.

All this has kept investors on edge and the markets have lost considerab­le ground. In the last one month alone, the prospects of a faster-than-expected hike in interest rate by the global central banks, especially the US Federal

Reserve (US Fed) to tame inflation has seen a sell-off in equities.

Back home, the S&P BSE Sensex and the Nifty50 have slipped over 7 per cent each in the last one month. On Friday, both the indexes lost ground — triggered by a selloff in the US markets that saw S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average tank 3.51 per cent, 4.90 per cent, and 3.03 per cent, respective­ly, in the worst single-day sell-off since 2020.

Wave of redemption­s

US equities, Wood had warned last week, are likely to be hit by a “wave of redemption­s” as the US Fed tightens its monetary policy and winds down its bond-buying program.

US domestic equity exchangetr­aded funds (ETFS) recorded an estimated net outflow of $20.7 billion in the week ended April 20, following a net outflow of $7.9 billion in the previous week.

“This is a reminder that before the monetary tightening-triggered correction or bear market, call it what you will, is over US stocks are likely to be hit by a wave of redemption­s. And because many of the ETFS own the same big cap stocks, it is likely to lead to significan­t declines in the previous market leaders. There are, for example, 14 ETFS traded in America indexed to the S&P 500 with total assets under management of nearly $1 trillion,” Wood wrote.

“GREED & fear had been expecting India to underperfo­rm in the Asian context in the first quarter of this year, as it probably would have done were it not for the further collapse in Chinese equities triggered by President Xi Jinping’s decision to double down on the Covid suppressio­n policy”

CHRISTOPHE­R WOOD

Global head of equity strategy at Jefferies

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India