The selling streak by foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) continues to grow, with another outflow of ₹3,731.60 crore from Indian stocks recorded in Monday’s trading session. This marks the 11th consecutive day of selling, highlighting a sustained trend of bearish sentiment among international investors towards the Indian equity market.
This brings their total withdrawals over the past 11 days to ₹73,123 crore and ₹62,124 crore in October so far, with the most substantial sell-off occurring on October 03, when FPIs offloaded ₹15,506 crore, according to data from Trendlyne. FPIs last engaged in net buying on September 26, acquiring stocks worth ₹630 crore.
Despite significant selling activity by FPIs, the Indian stock markets have experienced minimal impact due to strong support from domestic institutional investors. This robust buying has been acting as a cushion against the outflows from foreign investors.
However, these outflows have adversely affected the Indian rupee, which has fallen to its lowest level of ₹84.20 against the US dollar.
Following China’s unveiling of new policy measures aimed at reviving its faltering economy, FPIs have shifted their focus to Chinese stocks, hoping these measures will revitalise corporate earnings and the economy. Additionally, the attractive valuations of Chinese stocks compared to the elevated valuations of Indian stocks have led to significant buying interest in the former.
Dr. V K Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist, Geojit Financial Services, said, “The major trend in foreign portfolio flows in October, so far, has been the sustained selling by FPIs. FPIs have been following a strategy of ‘Sell India, Buy China’ after the Chinese authorities announced monetary and fiscal measures to stimulate the slowing Chinese economy.”
He noted that FPI money has been moving to Chinese stocks, which are cheap even now. The Hang Seng index (Chinese H stocks are listed in Hong Kong) is now trading at a PE of about 12, while Nifty is trading at a PE of 23 times estimated FY25 earnings. He believes that this valuation gap could attract further investments into Chinese stocks.
However, he emphasised that India has stronger growth prospects compared to China, justifying premium valuations. Nevertheless, he added, the significant valuation differential may continue to drive FPI selling in the near term.
Nifty 50 slides 4.4% from its recent peak
After a relentless upward march in the first eight months of the current calendar year, where every dip was seen as a buying opportunity, Indian stocks have reversed sharply in October, propelling the front-line indices to trade at multi-month lows.
In recent sessions, Indian equities have been relatively subdued as they seek direction amid a tug-of-war between the bulls and the bears after a sharp decline in the first week of October. While the bulls have dominated the market for the majority of 2024, their inability to sustain momentum has left equities without support in October.
Amid this backdrop, the Nifty 50 has corrected 2.91% in October, breaching the crucial 25,000 mark. From its recent peak of 26,277, the index has experienced a nearly 4.4% decline. Similarly, the Sensex has also fallen 4.65% from its recent peak of 85,978 and is down 3% so far this month.
Broader markets have not managed to escape the recent slump either, although the decline has been less severe compared to large-cap stocks. The Nifty Midcap 100 index is down 1.22% in October, while the Nifty Smallcap 100 index has lost 0.89% during the same period.
Several factors have contributed to this sharp sell-off, with the primary trigger being the steady outflows of FPIs, which exerted severe pressure on Indian equities.
Domestically, the anticipated weak performance from Indian companies in the September quarter has raised concerns and contributed to the reversal of Indian stocks in October. Additionally, tensions between Iran and Israel show no signs of easing. This situation is dampening global investor sentiment, particularly regarding India, as rising crude oil prices have the potential to alter inflation projections and impact corporate earnings.
Amid the ongoing tensions, the USA has recently imposed a fresh sanction on Iran, targeting the country’s petroleum and petrochemical sectors in response to its October 1 attack on Israel. In addition, the US is also sanctioning 16 entities engaged in the Iranian petroleum trade and blocking 23 vessels, as per the latest media reports.
The Biden administration approved the sale of billions of dollars in weapons to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, a fresh show of support to two allies that are crucial to the US pushback against Iran and its proxies as conflict escalates in the Middle East, Bloomberg reported.
Earnings to remain flat in 2Q, at multi-quarter low
Motilal Oswal estimates earnings of companies under its coverage universe to remain flat (lowest in eight quarters) and Nifty 50 earnings to grow marginally by 2% YoY in 2QFY25 (lowest in 17 quarters). Ex-OMCs, it expects the universe and Nifty earnings to grow 7% and 5% YoY, the lowest in eight and 17 quarters, respectively. Margin tailwinds are likely to ebb due to a high base.
“The EBITDA margin (ex-financials) is likely to contract by 150 bps YoY for the MOFSL Universe, reaching 16.4%, mainly dragged down by OMCs. Meanwhile, the margin is projected to contract 40 bps for the Nifty-50 at 20%. The overall earnings growth is anticipated to be primarily driven, once again, by BFSI (+11% YoY), along with healthcare (15% YoY), Utilities (+24% YoY), and the improved contribution of Telecom YoY (loss notably reducing to ₹4 billion in September 2024 from ₹3 billion in September 2023),” the brokerage said.
Market breadth narrowing; emphasis on style & sector rotation
With the recent runup in the market, domestic brokerage firm Axis Securities believes that much of the current narrative is already priced in. In this context, it expects near-term consolidation, with market breadth likely to narrow further. The focus is expected to remain on style and sector rotation in the coming months.
Additionally, following a strong catch-up by midcaps and smallcaps over the last few months, the brokerage sees a reduced margin of safety for these segments at current valuation levels compared to largecaps.
Given this outlook, it anticipates some time correction in specific areas of the broader market, with investment flows likely to shift towards largecaps. As a result, it believes the Nifty 50 could reach new highs in the near term. Over the long term, the brokerage continues to view the broader market positively. Two themes—’growth at a reasonable price’ and ‘quality’—remain attractive at this point, it said.
With the expected recovery in China, some cyclical sectors are likely to see a comeback in the domestic market. However, large-cap private banks, telecom, consumption, IT, and pharma provide more margin of safety in the near term, it opined.
The brokerage maintains its March 2025 Nifty 50 target at 24,600, valuing it at 20x on March 2026 earnings. It recommends that investors stay invested, maintaining a liquidity buffer of around 10%, to capitalise on dips by building positions in high-quality companies with strong earnings visibility, over a 12- to 18-month investment horizon.
Disclaimer: The views and recommendations given in this article are those of individual analysts. These do not represent the views of Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before taking any investment decisions.
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