Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Evolution of Indian mfg as an investment theme

- Dipti Sharma dipti.sharma@livemint.com HT

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.

 ?? ?? India aims to raise its share of manufactur­ing to 25% of GDP by 2047, from about 17% currently.
India aims to raise its share of manufactur­ing to 25% of GDP by 2047, from about 17% currently.

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