Evolution of Indian mfg as an investment theme
While India’s benchmark indices have hogged the headlines for scaling new peaks, and small- and mid-cap indices for their frothy valuations, one segment of the market has quietly outshone them all—manufacturing.
The sector, in fact, is thriving, bolstered by increased investments and the Union government’s push for indigenous production with its ‘Make in India’ drive and production-linked incentive schemes.
This has borne out in the stock markets as well. The Nifty India Manufacturing index has surged an impressive 14% so far this year, eclipsing the benchmark Nifty 50 and broader market indices. The Nifty Midcap 100 and the Nifty Smallcap 250 have risen by about 8% each this year, while the Nifty 50 has gained 4-5%.
The outperformance not only alludes to the growing recognition among investors of manufacturing as a key theme, but also points to early evidence of India developing into a global manufacturing hub. While the country has outshone in the services sector, especially in information technology, India’s manufacturing industry has lagged thus far.
India aims to raise its share of manufacturing to 25% of GDP by 2047, from about 17% currently. Manufacturing exports hit a record high of $447.46 billion in FY23, a 6.03% increase from $422 billion in FY22, reflecting the underlying momentum.
Vipul Bhowar, director, listed investments, Waterfield Advisors, said initiatives such as ‘Make in India’ and PLIs have played a crucial role in fostering a favourable business environment, encouraging investments, and promoting indigenous manufacturing. “The sector’s growth is evident, focusing on key industries such as chemicals, pharmaceuticals, electronics, automotive, industrial machinery, and textiles,” Bhowar said.
In the interim Union budget for 2024-25, the government increased the allocation for production-linked incentive schemes to ₹6,200 crore from ₹4,645 crore in 2023-24 (budget estimate).
Similarly, the allocation for the Modified Programme for Development of Semiconductors and display manufacturing ecosystem was more than doubled to ₹6,903 crore for 2024-25 (BE) from ₹3,000 crore in 2023-24 (BE). Other schemes such as solar power (grid) and national green hydrogen mission also received significantly higher budgetary allocations. A focus on policy continuity following the general election in April-May would bolster economic and business sentiment and buttress a much-anticipated recovery in private capital expenditure on infrastructure and manufacturing, say experts.