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Indian stocks set to hit record high

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BENGALURU: India’s benchmark BSE Sensex share index will scale a new record high by mid-year, according to strategist­s and brokers in a Reuters poll, who have upgraded their forecasts significan­tly from three months ago.

This more bullish view emerges from the poll despite widespread concern since the last Reuters poll over the damage a disruptive and radical government move to replace the bulk of currency in circulatio­n may have done to the economy.

So far there is no official evidence of such damage occurring. India’s economy had grown 7 percent versus a year ago last quarter, while the government’s ability to drive such sweeping change appears to have emboldened investors and traders alike.

Increased economic optimism coincides with a rush into global stock markets that is based in part on a view the world economy is in an upturn as well as hopes that the new US administra­tion will deregulate finance and cut taxes.

Indian shares have outperform­ed major global stock indices this year, gaining over 10 percent, and are forecast to rise another 3 percent by mid-year and a little over 6 percent by the end of 2017 from here.

“A stable rupee and global liquidity will give more room (for) the Indian stock market to go up,” said C.A. Rudramurth­y, managing director at Vachana Investment­s.

The Reuters poll of more than 50 equity market strategist­s, brokers, and fund managers conducted between March 20 and 27 found the BSE Sensex is forecast to rise to a record of 30,294 in the next three months.

It is then expected to reach 31,250 by the end of this year. The index closed at 29,409.52 on Tuesday.

Similar hefty gains are forecast for the broader NSE index, which is forecast to trade at 9,300 by mid2017 and then rise to 9,525 by December 2017.

Just this month, $6.1 billion of foreign investment flowed into Indian debt and equities. Foreign investors are expected to be the biggest contributo­rs to Indian share price movements over the next three months, according to the majority of respondent­s polled.

India has attracted substantia­l foreign investment in recent years via a relatively stable rupee as well as a government that enjoys strong support and is keen to enact reforms that attract foreign capital.

A separate Reuters poll showed that the rupee is expected to weak- en slightly, trading at 68.29 per dollar in six months and 68.84 in a year compared with around 65 now.

The Nifty 50 share index hit a record high after the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) resounding­ly won an election earlier this month in Uttar Pradesh, home to 220 million people.

While the Sensex is just a tad over 600 points away from its lifetime high, equity strategist­s are concerned about continued downgrades to corporate earnings.

Strategist­s were also split whether the current stock index level is expensive, fairly valued or cheap.

Twenty-four of 49 respondent­s said that Indian shares are currently overvalued.

“(The) market is overvalued as earnings have not picked up, and after the earnings downgrade that we saw in the last quarter there has not been much improvemen­t in the economy,” said Neeraj Dewan, director at Quantum Securities.

Twenty-three poll respondent­s said Indian shares were fairly priced, while the remaining two said Indian shares were cheap.

Despite that split, the vast majority of analysts and brokers do not expect a correction of more than 10 percent this year.

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