BusinessLine (Mumbai)

Small-caps wilt under selling pressure on valuation concern

- Shravan Nune KS Badri Narayanan

Broader market came under heavy selling pressure on Monday, amid talk of potential bubble in the small and midcap segments and stiff valuation. The BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty declined around 0.70.8 per cent while the slide was deeper in the case of BSE SmallCap that plunged 2.01 per cent.

TIBREWALA EFFECT

The fall was evident as 3,095 stocks declined as against just 876 that advanced in today’s trade. As many as 193 stocks hit 52week high, while 105 stocks hit 52week low. Except the healthcare, all the sectoral indices have declined.

Smallcaps have been under pressure ever since the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e frozen accounts associated with Dubaibased hawala operator Hari Shankar Tibrewala, as part of its investigat­ions into Mahadev Online Book illegal betting case, said market experts.

According to the ED, Tibrewala has been laundering the proceeds from the betting operations by investing the money in shares of companies listed on the BSE and NSE.

“ED is investigat­ing a case against “Mahadev Online Book”, which is an umbrella syndicate arranging online platforms for enabling illegal betting websites to enrol new users, create user IDs and laundering of money through a layered web of benami bank accounts,” the investigat­ing agency said in its X post a few days back.

“The broader market continued its underperfo­rmance due to valuation concerns, while investors are rebalancin­g their portfolios to include safe haven assets like gold,” Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Financial Services, said.

Interestin­gly, both foreign portfolio investors and domestic institutio­ns were buyers in today’s trade. According to provisiona­l data on exchanges, FPIs bought equities worth ₹4,212.76 crore and DIIs ₹3,238.39 crore.

SEBI Chairperso­n Madhabi Puri Buch said there are pockets of froth in the small and midcap space in the equity markets that has the potential to become a bubble and burst affecting investors.

Siddhartha Khemka, HeadRetail Research, Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd, said, “Sentiments dampened after the SEBI chief highlighte­d irrational runups and expensive valuations in small and midcaps. Also, stress test disclosure­s for small and midcap funds are to be announced on March 15. This is likely to keep the pressure on the broader market in the nearterm.”

‘BET ON LARGE-CAPS’

“Going ahead, we expect the consolidat­ion to continue in the market with large bouts of volatility. We recommend switching to large caps where the riskreward is more favourable,” he added.

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