Do you think 2023-24 (FY24) could prove to be a perfect storm for Indian equity markets as they deal with sticky inflation, the possibility of El Niño, and fears of global recession?
We believe FY24 will be a year of ‘middling’ returns for the Indian market. We have an S&P BSE Sensex target of 66,000 by the end of calendar year 2023 (CY23).
India’s macroeconomic outlook appears stable, with strong growth in non-food credit and goods and services tax collection, deleveraged corporate balance sheets, and robust government capital expenditure.
The recent indication of a ‘US Federal Reserve peak’ should also help. The risks to Indian equities arise from downward pressure on earnings estimates and still-expensive relative valuations, even after the recent valuation correction.
In the near term, some of the Asian EM peers, particularly those in North Asia, could outperform India. China and South Korea, for example, are trading at sharp valuation discounts to Asia and these markets’ long-term averages. No doubt there are concerns in these markets: China’s post-reopening growth could disappoint the market’s optimistic expectations and South Korean technology hardware exports could suffer from demand compression in the developed economies.
India’s sustained outperformance should commence later this year once the earnings estimate downgrades are over.
Based on our conversations with foreign investors, we are not overly concerned about the outcomes of provincial elections. Over the past eight/nine years, we have seen state election results have little correlation with the general election outcome. Our base case factors in political and policy stability in the foreseeable time horizon.Is it time to start buying stocks?
We are underweight on materials, consumer staples, and industrial. Our focus is on companies with strong return on equity, robust cash generation, and likely stability in the earnings estimates.
It’s difficult to argue for a significant increase in dividend payout in India.
Several Asian high-dividend yield screens that we have created for our clients tend to throw up predominantly North Asian companies — very few from India figure there.
FII flows into India are shaped by India’s attractiveness to these investors and its outlook on other Asian markets.
However, flows into India picked up again in March–May, as concerns about China’s growth sustainability occupied centre stage and recession concerns in developed economies dampened the outlook for North Asian exporters somewhat.
Any view on the 2022-23 January-March quarter results season?
Currently, the aggregate reported earnings for companies in Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) Asia (excluding Japan) have been 15-16 per cent lower than consensus estimates, and for those in MSCI India have been 18.6 per cent lower.
However, we think there could be a downside to these estimates — especially in consumer discretionary, energy, materials, and industrial.
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