Stock Market

By Kartik GoyalThe first reaction of investors to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modis landslide election win was to bid up local assets.
The euphoria didnt last long.Stocks fell after rallying to records and the rupee slid as investors refocused on domestic realities, and posted modest gains Friday.
While Modis sweeping victory allayed fears of a group of diverse parties forming the government, his return coincides with a slowing economy, wider budget deficit, volatile oil prices and global trade tensions.Slowing growth, tricky inflation dynamics and the fact that the external environment has worsened with escalation in trade tensions are all potentially negative factors affecting India, said Anders Faergemann, a fund manager in London at PineBridge Investments.Markets had partially priced in the election outcome after exit polls this week pointed to Modis return to power, which explains Thursdays buy-the-rumor, sell-the-fact reaction.
Also, this weeks rally has pushed up equity valuations to levels that are questionable in a country struggling to deal with a deteriorating macro environment.Forward multiples are demanding and when viewed against the backdrop of a slowing economy and earnings undershoot, they limit upside, said Sriyan Pietersz, an investment strategist at Matthews Asia in Singapore.
A strong mandate from the rural sector may prompt Modi to deliver on promises of cash income transfers to poor, which may widen the fiscal deficit, he said.The government is already borrowing a record $100 billion, a key reason behind why a big rally has eluded local bonds despite two rate cuts in 2019.
The yield on benchmark 10-year debt declined two basis points to 7.22 per cent at 9:22 a.m.
in Mumbai.Indias rupee rallied 1.6 per cent in the past three months, the most in Asia, amid wagers of Modi returning to power.
Further appreciation may trigger purchases by the central bank, according to Amundi SA.The rupee has significantly outperformed its peers and further relative appreciation would act as a drag on Indias trade competitiveness, said Abbas Ameli-Renani, a London-based portfolio manager at Amundi.
Whilst we have a positive bias on the rupee, we are not inclined to add to exposure at these levels.While Modis party in its second term is expected to wield more political strength, the stock markets elevation will depend on the measures he takes to hasten growth, said Nilesh Shah, chief executive at Kotak Asset Management Co.
in Mumbai.Markets are pricing in double-digit earnings growth over next few years.
From a risk reward point of view, it is delicately balanced, Shah said.Here are views from other investors and analysts:Morgan Stanley (Ridham Desai)Sees the SP BSE Sensex touching 45,000 and the NSE Nifty 50 Index reaching 13,500 by June 2020; it previously had a target of 42,000 for Sensex by end of 2019Nikko Asset (Edward Ng)Indian bonds are set to outperform their Asian emerging-market peers due to their attractive yieldsAberdeen Standard Investments (Lin Jing Leong)Likes the highly rated corporate papers, and is overweight rupee sovereign and company bonds in India, especially in the short end of the curve





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United States markets end greatly lower amid surging treasury yields


Asian markets settle mainly down on Thursday


Asian markets trade mostly higher in early offers on Wednesday


US markets end lower on Tuesday


Asian markets settle mostly higher on Wednesday


Asian markets trade in green in early offers on Tuesday


US markets ends modestly higher on Monday


Asian markets settle mainly higher on Tuesday


Asian markets trade mostly lower in early deals on Monday


United States markets end greater on Friday


Asian markets trade mostly lower in early deals of Friday


US markets end mostly in green on Thursday


Asian markets end blended on Friday