Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Sensex, Nifty hit new highs on global rally

ON STREET Budget, corp earnings to drive rally: Analysts

- Nasrin Sultana nasrin.s@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Indian stock indices scaled new lifetime highs on Monday, riding the coat-tails of a worldwide rally in equities. Analysts expect the rally to continue, but caution that any negative surprises in the 1 February budget or worse-than-expected corporate earnings could cut it short.

On Monday, the BSE’S 30-share Sensex closed at 35,798.01 points, up 286.43 points, or 0.81%. The NSE’S 50-share Nifty closed at 10,966.20 points, up 71.50 points, or 0.66%.

The Sensex has risen 5.11% and the Nifty 4.14% so far this year. That compares with the MSCI Emerging Markets Index’s gains of 6.34% (till Friday) and the MSCI World’s 4.88%.

“The markets are currently driven by liquidity. Emerging markets have started attracting flows in this year and India is a beneficiar­y of the flow,” said Atul Bhole, vice-president, investment­s, at DSP Blackrock Investment Managers.

Bhole cautioned that markets are wary of the likely reintroduc­tion of a long-term capital gains tax in the budget, which could short-circuit the rally in equities.

So far this year, foreign institutio­nal investors have bought Indian shares worth $993.16 million as part of a worldwide rise in equities allocation. A Bank of America-merrill Lynch fund managers’ report on January 16 showed equity allocation at the highest level since March 2015.

“The markets are expected to rise further with no immediate negative triggers. However, lately, the rally is driven by a handful of stocks and is not broad-based. There will be more 1 Jan 2018 22 Jan 2018 legs to the rally if no unfavourab­le or negative announceme­nt is made in the budget,” said Deepak Jasani, head (retail research) at HDFC Securities Ltd.

Expectatio­ns of a recovery in corporate earnings is also driving sentiment. That, along with an expected rise in consumer demand following two years of good monsoon, will sustain the rally, said Rahul Shah, vicepresid­ent (equity advisory group) at Motilal Oswal Securities Ltd.

Early trends in December quarter corporate earnings indicate a revival in business growth following a downturn in the aftermath of the November 2016 invalidati­on of high-value banknotes and the July 2017 implementa­tion of the goods and services tax.

According to data provider Capitaline, growth in net profit after adjustment for one-time items of 103 Bse-listed firms which have reported earnings so far jumped to a 13-quarter high, rising 23.02% year-on-year in the December quarter, compared with 4.92% in the preceding three months.

Still, others say that it is too early to call a recovery in corporate earnings. In the absence of robust earnings, stock valuations will become more expensive.

Currently, the Sensex trades at 19.23 times its expected earnings over the next 12 months. That not only makes it one of the costliest benchmark gauges globally, but also expensive compared with historical averages. On 97% of trading days since 1 January 2007, the Sensex’s priceearni­ngs ratio has been less than 19 times.

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