Business Standard

Wood hails India as best recovery story across Asia

- PUNEET WADHWA

Asteady fall in Covid cases, coupled with a sharp economic recovery in India, has made Christophe­r Wood, global head of equity strategy at Jefferies, reiterate his bullish view on Indian equities.

In December 2020, Wood raised exposure to Indian equities twice in his Asia, ex-japan, long-only portfolio.

“With Covid cases in India now 88 per cent off their peak amid growing hopes of herd immunity, India looks right now Asia’s best post-covid recovery story,” Wood wrote in his weekly note to investors, GREED & fear.

For the stock market to have a real nasty unwind at the global level rather than just a bull market correction, Wood believes there needs to be a catalyst in the form of an economic downturn or a material tightening in US Federal Reserve’s (US Fed) policy.

He ruled out the possibilit­y of either of these catalysts materialis­ing.

“The risks are building for obviously overvalued US equities, and in particular­ly high PE growth stocks. But before those risks become a reality, treasury bonds have to sell off more and cyclical stocks have to rally more,” Wood said.

Rising inflation expectatio­ns, he believes, is another reason that will boost cyclical trades, going ahead. Also, the best way to play this is via bank and oil-related stocks.

“One of the favoured cyclical areas is, clearly, banks. Banks in Europe and Asia, exjapan, offer over 40 per cent upside if they simply re-rate to a level of one standard deviation below the long-run mean in terms of the relative price-to-book multiple,” Wood wrote.

Oil prices crossing $61 per barrel for the first time in 13 months has yet again stoked fears of inflation, especially in India, which imports around 70 per cent of its crude oil requiremen­t. Since November 2020, oil prices are up over 60 per cent.

“Despite the risks, we believe Saudi and Opec+ actions have put a new price floor of $50 per barrel for 2021. Expect dated Brent prices to be in low-to-mid $50/barrel for much of 2021, with stronger support in the second half of the year,” says Chris Midgley, global director of analytics at S&P Global Platts.

At the bourses back home, while the S&P BSE Oil & Gas index has underperfo­rmed (up 67 per cent since March low), the frontline BSE Sensex has gained 93 per cent since then. The BSE Bankex has moved up 106 per cent during this period.

Buy bitcoin on dips

“GREED & fear REMAINS EXTREMELY BULLISH ON BITCOIN AND ADVISES THOSE WHO ARE NOT INVESTED TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF ANY PULLBACKS”

Despite a surge over the past few weeks, Wood still remains bullish on bitcoin and suggests investors use any decline in the cryptocurr­ency to buy.

In December 2020, Wood had trimmed exposure to gold in favour of bitcoin in his long-only global portfolio for US dollardeno­minated pension funds and bought the cryptocurr­ency around the $20,000 mark.

“GREED & fear remains extremely bullish on bitcoin and advises those who are not invested to take advantage of any pullbacks. Remember that institutio­nal ownership of bitcoin has only just begun,” Wood said in his recent note.

Bitcoin rose 85 times in 12 months after the first halving in November 2012. So far, it has risen 418 per cent since the most recent halving in May 2020, according to data.

The recent spurt was after Elon Musk said he invested $1.5 billion of Tesla’s $19.4 billion of cash in bitcoin in January. Earlier, Nasdaq-quoted Microstrat­egy invested almost all of its own treasury funds in bitcoin in the second half of 2020.

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CHRISTOPHE­R WOOD

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