Foreign brokerages not so bullish, market correction in the offing?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Foreign brokerages are downgrading Indian markets for being extremely expensive based on traditional valuation metrics, when compared to peers such as China and Japan in Asia.

The NSE Nifty is up 30 per cent in 2021 so far, while the BSE sensex is up 28 per cent, driven by financials, utilities, industrials and consumer discretionary stocks even as the broader MSCI Asia Pacific ex-Japan index has largely remained flat.

On Monday, Nomura downgraded India’s equity markets to neutral from overweight due to expensive equity valuations.

The Japanese brokerage firm prefers allocating to China and other Asean countries that have underperformed India in 2021. The brokerage feels while the upside is already priced in, headwinds could emerge that will prove to be risky in the future.

Nomura said 77 per cent of domestic stocks in the MSCI index are trading higher than pre-pandemic or post 2018 average valuations.

“We now see an unfavourable risk-reward given valuations, as a number of positives appear to be priced in, whilst headwinds are emerging. We, thus, downgrade India to neutral in our regional allocation and will look for better entry points given our still-constructive medium term view. We like China (significant under-performer seeing stabilising sentiment) and Asean (tactically laggard reopening play),” said equity strategists Chetan Seth and Amit Phillips in a note.

Ironically, in February Nomura had upgraded India to overweight, citing fiscal activism and declining Covid-19 cases.

“However, we think these positives are now adequately reflected in current valuations – that appear rich not only on absolute basis but also on relative basis. Even on two-year forward price-to earnings (PE) basis (incorporating India’s strong earnings outlook), India is trading at record high elevated premium relative to regional markets,” the analysts added.

What are the biggest risks for India?Elevated commodity prices, sticky core inflation and tentative signs of slowdown in demand are among the biggest risks for India.

Analysts at Nomura think if the current trend in prices of natural gas, crude, coal and electricity continue till the end of the calendar year, and increase by around 5 per cent till March 2022, then the potential impact on consumer price inflation (CPI) would be around 1 per cent.

Nomura not the only one

Nomura is not the only one advising clients to cut allocations to India. Last week, brokerage UBS echoed similar views and said India has become “unattractive” due to “extremely expensive” valuations when compared to the Asean countries.

The brokerage also said that earnings momentum is fading in India and there is less scope for an economic rebound this year, even as domestic stocks have outperformed markets like Indonesia by 31 per cent year-to-date.

Low real yield and expensive currency suggest some vulnerability for India in the tapering environment.

“India, like Taiwan, looks very poor on our scorecard framework. The relative valuation of India to Asean, two areas with similar growth dynamics and occasional perceived macro vulnerabilities, looks too wide to justify,” it said.

A Bank of America survey that was released last week showed global fund houses are underweight on emerging markets and want to cut exposure in the next 12 months, citing inflationary risks.

Global fund managers’ allocation in October to emerging market equities fell to the lowest level since September 2018, while allocation to US equities increased to the largest since November 2020.

In a newsletter titled Greed & Fear, Christopher Wood, the global head of equity strategy at Jefferies, has said India’s overweight position looks ‘vulnerable’.

What is triggering the market correction?

Rising fuel prices, inflation and high valuations are now triggering a correction in the market after months of record rallying.

While the sensex is down 1 per cent in the last five days, slipping below the 61,000-mark, the Nifty also slipped below 18,000 as experts are starting to caution investors because of stretched valuations and the impact of inflation on corporate earnings.

The BSE sensex last touched an all time high of 62,245 on October 19, but since then it has declined by 2 per cent.

More such calls for reduction of allocation to India is likely to result in further outflow of funds and a deeper correction in the markets.

Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) have already turned net sellers by pulling out Rs 3,825 crore in October so far. FPIs had been net buyers for two consecutive months and had invested Rs 26,517 crore in September and Rs 16,459 crore in August.



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Jeffries’ Christopher Wood adds Bajaj Finance to his Asia ex-Japan portfolio, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Jefferies’ Global Head of Equities, Christopher Wood, remains bullish on India as he sees new levers of growth in this economy. And to that end, he has just added another Indian stock in his Asia ex-Japan long only portfolio.

Wood in his latest Greed & fear report said he is adding Bajaj Finance to the portfolio with a 4 per cent weightage. It replaces LG Chem, the Korean chemical company. Bajaj Finance was already part of Wood’s long-only India portfolio.

With this change, Indian stocks have 35 per cent weightage in the Asia ex-Japan portfolio now. This is more than the combined weight of China and Taiwan. Among other territories that are present in the portfolio are Korea, Australia, Hong Kong and the Asean region.

Bajaj Finance has seen massive investor interest in the past few years. The stock has more than doubled in the past one year thanks to its strong balance sheet, which has helped it wade through the Covid-19 pandemic despite some slowdown in business growth.

Moreover, with India’s likely inclusion in global bond indices, Bajaj Finance stands to be one of the big beneficiaries, Morgan Stanley said in its report.

Besides including Bajaj Finance, Wood has also increased the weight of Australia in the Asia Pacific ex-Japan relative return portfolio by two percentage points at the expense of China. Moreover, he said an investment will also be initiated in the liquid copper play, OZ Minerals, in the Asia ex-Japan long-only portfolio

The nervousness over tech companies in China, thanks to the government’s tightening, has had an impact on Wood’s portfolios. He removed Alibaba from China long-only equity portfolio and added Hua Hong Semiconductor. He also increased the weightage of China Telecom.

Can ETFs be counterproductive?
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have grown to be a primary mode of investment for retail and many institutional investors, especially in the developed economies. But in the light of the China’s gag on its Internet companies, some concerns have arisen.

In the US, internet companies have grown to be among the biggest ones. They have become so big that many lawmakers have demanded that they be broken up to rein in their clout. Those voices have gathered momentum, especially in the backdrop of the developments in China.

Wood says this could create problems for ETFs. “The ultimate problem with passive investing, otherwise known as investor socialism, is that everybody owns the same thing; a trend further exacerbated by the boom in investing in index tracking ETFs,” he said. “With the six big tech stocks now accounting for 24.7 per cent of the S&P500 market capitalisation, the risks are obvious if Washington ever summons the backbone to actually do something about the Big Tech as opposed to just talking about it.”



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