Business Standard

Narrow rally in August a cause for concern

- SAMIE MODAK Mumbai, 1 September

The sharp up-move in the markets in August has caused more concerns than jubilation. The benchmark Sensex rose by nearly 5,000 points, or 9.4 per cent, during their month — its best monthly showing in nine months. Despite this, the overall market breadth was the worst since March 2020, when stocks had collapsed following the global outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic. In August, 1,755 stocks listed on the BSE advanced, while 1,888 fell, resulting in an advance-decline ratio of 0.93. Since April 2020, the market breadth has been negative only once — in March 2021.

Also, the returns on the Nifty

Smallcap 100 index turned negative for the first time this year at -2.5 per cent. “It was a strange month for the market in more than one way. While the headlines pointed to a bull run, there was some pain building underneath the surface,” said an analyst.

Even if one dissects the

Sensex performanc­e, only a handful of stocks propelled the index in August, with just seven index components accounting for two-thirds of the gains.

Experts said recent buying notwithsta­nding, foreign portfolio investor (FPI) flows have turned muted in recent months. This, coupled with concerns around valuations and earnings, is weighing on market performanc­e, believe experts. “We have had 12 months of really strong flows from foreign flows until June 2021. But this quarter, we have seen softness in FPI flows. But domestic flows — household savings moving into equities — are really holding up the markets. Our view is that since we have seen India perform really strong despite not delivering the kind of earnings growth that other emerging markets have given, there can be a period of consolidat­ion,” said Sunil Tirumalai, equity strategist, UBS Securities. The brokerage has a 12-month Nifty target of 16,000, indicating some correction from current levels.

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