Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

After ‘populist’ budget, comes the crash

- Ami Shah and Ravindra Sonavane ami.s@livemint.com ■ ■

MUMBAI: Benchmark Sensex suffered its worst rout in more than two years on Friday as the budget proposals on taxing equities torpedoed investor sentiment. The 30-share index plummeted 840 points — its biggest single-day slump since August 24, 2015.

MUMBAI: Indian stocks nosedived on Friday as investors were disappoint­ed by a Union budget that focused on populist measures ahead of general elections in 2019 and imposed a long-term capital gains tax (LTCG) on equities.

A sell-off in global equities also dampened sentiment, with ₹4.34 lakh crore in notional investor wealth getting wiped out during the day. The benchmark Sensex plummeted 840 points, posting its worst post-budget day decline since 2008. The upward revision of fiscal deficit targets for the current financial year and the next also spooked investors.

Ratings agency Fitch said weak public finances constrain India’s sovereign ratings.

At the close of trading, the Sensex ended 2.34% lower at 35,066.75 points. The National Stock Exchange’s 50-share Nifty shed 2.33% or 256.30 points to end the week at 10,760.60 points. The erosion was worse for mid-cap and small-cap stocks. The BSE mid-cap and small-cap indices shed 4% and 4.65%, respective­ly.

“Considerin­g the valuations, specifical­ly in the mid- and smallcap space, a correction was long overdue. Market was in need of a correction, and it found a reason in the budget,” said Navneet Munot, chief investment officer, SBI Funds Management Pvt. Ltd.

Even after the correction, the mid-cap index is trading at 21.8 times expected earnings over the next 12 months and the small-cap index at 18.31 times.

“Weak sentiment in global equities also played their role and bothered Indian markets,” added Munot. With the carnage in the equity markets, reintroduc­tion of LTCG tax and bond yields rising, the fixed income market may have become attractive.

“Indian equity market will take further cues from global markets, and earnings trajectory. Now that bond yields have spiked, on a relative basis, investors should also start looking at fixed income markets for investment opportunit­ies,” Munot said.

In his budget speech on Thursday, finance minister Arun Jaitley announced that an LTCG— arising out of the sale of equityorie­nted mutual fund schemes as well as from direct equity shares—will now be taxed at 10% if the cumulative capital gains exceed ₹100,000 in a year.

Foreign institutio­nal investors have pumped a net of more than $2 billion into Indian shares in January, while domestic institutio­nal investors went slow and invested a net of around ₹400 crore in the asset class last month. Some felt that Friday’s fall was an over-reaction.

“It is an unwarrante­d panic reaction. There were similar reactions when securities transactio­n tax was introduced but over time it was digested well. Indian markets dragged today mostly due to the global markets’ weakness,” said Dhiraj Sachdev, senior vice-president and equities fund manager at HSBC Asset Management.

Nasrin Sultana contribute­d to this story.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? A file photo of the BSE office in Mumbai. The Sensex closed 2.34% lower at 35,066.75 points on Friday
MINT/FILE A file photo of the BSE office in Mumbai. The Sensex closed 2.34% lower at 35,066.75 points on Friday

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