Business Standard

Day trading distorts valuations

Investors should be very careful under the circumstan­ces when entering small-caps, in particular

- DEVANGSHU DATTA

There has been an odd shift in retail investor attitude in the past month or two. Retail investors are buying shares but they’re doing it directly. Investment through mutual funds has slowed.

Systematic investment plan (SIP) volumes eased off in Q1, 2020-21 and so have other equity mutual fund inflows. At the same time, daily trade volumes are up considerab­ly. Smallcaps have led and outperform­ed other segments during the market recovery of the past four weeks. This is always a sign of retail interest. Delivery ratios have also fallen, which means daytrading is up with traders settling positions.

There are several possible reasons but there is also lack of data, or surveys, to confirm what’s actually happening. So the following thoughts are based on incomplete informatio­n and guesswork. Behavioura­lly, it may sound contradict­ory that somebody who invests via SIPS (a conservati­ve style of passive investment) would also trade on margins. But there are individual­s who do both.

We know that the number of retail investors has shot up because a lot of new accounts have been opened in retail brokerages. This mirrors similar behaviour in the USA where discount brokerages have seen many retail accounts opened during the pandemic. This could be at least partly driven by young individual­s sitting at home with not much else to do.

One factor inhibiting SIPS may be that a lot of investors have seen, or anticipate, a loss of income. So they cannot make structured commitment­s. However, they have current cash in hand. This is possible. A trader could be using some funds, which he will soon need for household expenses. These funds cannot be committed to a SIP. But there is a short window to use this as margin in the hopes of making a quick buck with high leverage.

Day trading is a high risk, high leverage mode. It can lead to vertical crashes or climbs. Day traders are typically under-capitalise­d and have to unwind in a hurry if there’s an adverse move. This creates feedback loops. Adverse moves get reinforced by more volume that push prices further into the adverse trend.

Small-caps do traditiona­lly outperform during bull runs and underperfo­rm during bear markets but a high prevalence of day traders makes this behaviour more extreme. Most day traders are optimists favouring long positions. This trait is encouraged by authoritie­s the world over, since there are usually curbs on short selling. This means that crashes are more likely to be reinforced as stop losses are hit and traders are forced out.

Very few day-traders make money but since trading is a zero-sum game, the winners make a lot of money. It’s a “hyper-pareto” situation – say, 5 per cent of traders make 90 per cent of the money, while 95 per cent of traders lose. Apart from the adrenaline, this is the bait for to attract traders.

A prevalence of day-trading changes the market environmen­t. While programmed algo trading also leads to sudden leaps and crashes, algo traders are well-capitalise­d and focus on high-volume counter. There is a base volume level and float in such counters, and there is institutio­nal support, which means that there is a floor on stock prices.

Retail day traders often focus on smallcaps. This leads to circuit moves since it causes abnormally high volumes and low delivery ratios in counters without much float. That volume can suddenly dry up, leading to squeezes when counterpar­ties disappear, and delivery becomes impossible. The lack of institutio­nal positions also means that there is no floor on prices. Stocks can hit the circuit instantly and freeze as every trading session opens. Quite a few stocks in the small-caps segment seems to be heading in this direction. While the trend is up, this means soaring prices. If the trend changes, it can lead to deep crashes.

This sort of market behaviour leads to several types of incoherenc­e. One disconnect is between the institutio­nal attitude and the retail attitude. Retail traders are bullish and pouring money into the market but institutio­ns are cautious at the moment. Their focus is on different segments.

Fundamenta­ls in small-caps are often hard to judge. The lack of institutio­nal coverage also means lack of due diligence. Day trading prepondera­nce distorts valuations as well. Investors should be very careful under the circumstan­ces when entering small-caps in particular.

Retail day traders often focus on small-caps. This leads to circuit moves since it causes abnormally high volumes and low delivery ratios in counters without much float

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