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Expert view: Nifty EPS may grow at a 13% CAGR over FY25–FY27, says Anil Rego of Right Horizons PMS
Expert view: Nifty EPS may grow at a 13% CAGR over FY25–FY27, says Anil Rego of Right Horizons PMS

Mint

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Mint

Expert view: Nifty EPS may grow at a 13% CAGR over FY25–FY27, says Anil Rego of Right Horizons PMS

Expert view: Anil Rego, the founder and fund manager at Right Horizons PMS, believes the Nifty 50 EPS may grow at a CAGR of nearly 13 per cent over FY25–FY27, making the case for moderate, earnings-driven gains over the medium term. In an interview with Mint, Rego shared his expectations for Q1 earnings and said he is positive about banking, defence, and consumer discretionary sectors, among others, at this juncture. Edited excerpts: Following a sluggish start, Indian markets witnessed a notable recovery in June, spurred by a combination of supportive global developments and decisive domestic policy actions. The Reserve Bank of India's 50 bps rate cut and a 100 bps reduction in the CRR, alongside a 9 per cent monsoon surplus and easing oil prices, have improved liquidity and sentiment. This led to a sharp uptick in rate-sensitive sectors like financials, real estate, and autos, with broader markets outperforming large caps. Globally, while risk sentiment has improved post-ceasefire in the Middle East, geopolitical fragility, policy uncertainty in the US, and tariff tensions remain key overhangs. Despite these risks, corporate earnings remain resilient, and consensus expects Nifty EPS to grow at a CAGR of nearly 13 per cent over FY25–FY27. This supports the case for moderate, earnings-driven gains over the medium term. The US tariff risk is a growing concern for Indian markets, especially after India announced retaliatory tariffs on US steel and aluminium at the WTO. While the risk remains sector-specific for now, impacting exports like IT, pharma, and metals, it does not yet pose a threat of prolonged economic pain due to India's strong domestic fundamentals. However, if trade tensions escalate further, it could hurt earnings in export-oriented sectors and trigger FPI outflows. The Q1FY26 earnings season is expected to show early signs of recovery, but it may not mark a broad-based turnaround just yet. While some sectors are poised to outperform, others are likely to face lingering challenges, suggesting that the worst may be behind us selectively, not uniformly. Banking sector: Banks are expected to report muted earnings growth due to margin compression from the RBI's recent repo rate cuts, seasonally weak fee income, and elevated credit costs, particularly in unsecured and agri loan segments. However, the outlook improves from the second half of the financial year (H2FY26), with expectations of improved loan growth, easing deposit costs, and declining slippages. IT sector: The IT sector is likely to report mixed revenue growth. Tier-1 IT companies may post flat to marginally negative constant-currency (CC) growth, with only a few companies expected to grow sequentially. Mid-tier firms are expected to do relatively better, driven by strength in BFSI, healthcare, and GenAI-led demand. The sector's deal pipeline remains healthy, and margin guidance is stable, indicating resilience despite macro headwinds. The market outlook supports a selective sectoral approach, focusing on areas with strong earnings visibility, structural tailwinds, and valuation comfort. Financials (banks & NBFCs) Banks remain structurally positive, with asset quality stabilising and credit demand holding up. Margins may have peaked, but lower funding costs from RBI rate cuts should aid profitability from H2FY26. NBFCs, especially in retail lending, gold loans, and vehicle finance, are expected to benefit from improved liquidity and demand recovery. Funding diversification and strong disbursement momentum support their outlook. Public and private capex revival, strong order books, and government focus on infrastructure make this sector attractive. Execution momentum is visible across electrification, construction equipment, and engineering segments, backed by rising investments and policy incentives. A structural growth story driven by indigenous procurement (92 per cent of contracts awarded to Indian firms), record exports, and rising capex allocation. Private players are gaining traction alongside DPSUs, supported by a ₹ 40,000 crore emergency procurement push. Hospitals are showing robust growth in profitability, ARPOB, and occupancy rates. Expansion into tier-2 cities and the medical tourism potential offer multi-year tailwinds. Diagnostics and digital health initiatives continue to support earnings resilience. Urban consumption remains healthy, aided by premiumisation and easing input costs. Value fashion, QSRs, electronics, and jewellery segments are doing well. Tax relief and rural revival could further aid demand in H2FY26. EMS firms are benefitting from PLI schemes, China+1 diversification, and rising demand for domestic electronics. Strong capex, growing order books, and operating leverage suggest continued double-digit growth. The Indian wealth management sector is at a pivotal inflection point, driven by the rapid rise of HNIs and ultra-HNIs. Financial assets held by these segments are projected to grow from $1.2 trillion in 2023 to $2.2 trillion by 2028, reflecting strong wealth creation and rising financialization of assets. Yet, only 15 per cent of India's financial wealth is professionally managed, compared to nearly 75 per cent in developed markets. This vast gap presents a structural opportunity for PMS, AIFs, and advisory platforms to expand. There appears to be selective value emerging in the IT sector, particularly among mid-tier companies, although the broader outlook remains cautious. Early Q1FY26 earnings trends suggest that: Tier-1 IT firms are expected to post muted revenue growth in constant currency terms, with flat to low-single-digit QoQ changes. Deal flow remains intact, but revenue conversion is lagging due to delayed decision-making by clients in the US and Europe. Mid-cap IT players, however, are showing signs of resilience. They are benefitting from niche capabilities in areas like healthcare, engineering services, and AI-linked digital services. Early previews indicate better execution and margin improvement from this segment. From a valuation standpoint, the sector has derated and is trading closer to its long-term average. While high-growth tailwinds of the pandemic years have faded, the sector offers reasonable entry points for long-term investors willing to ride out near-term demand uncertainty. Cost efficiency, GenAI adoption, and vendor consolidation deals could drive outperformance for well-positioned firms. As of June 2025, key indices like the Sensex are trading at nearly 24.7 times trailing PE and nearly 3.7 times P/B, which are above their 10-year averages. This elevated valuation comes after a sharp June rally driven by the RBI's front-loaded rate cuts, falling crude prices, and foreign inflows. In this context, a prudent equity investment strategy would involve: Bottom-up stock selection: Focus on fundamentally strong companies with stable earnings visibility, robust cash flows, and sectoral tailwinds, particularly in financials, manufacturing, healthcare, and select midcap IT. Maintain valuation discipline: Avoid chasing momentum in overvalued stocks or sectors. Seek opportunities where growth is not fully priced in, especially in sectors benefiting from reforms, PLI, or rising domestic demand. Diversify across market caps: While large caps offer safety in uncertain times, select mid and small caps with solid fundamentals and reasonable valuations can provide alpha as the cycle broadens. Use volatility to build exposure: Geopolitical risks, global rate uncertainty, and election-driven policies may trigger short-term corrections. These should be used to accumulate quality names rather than exiting in panic. Read all market-related news here Read more stories by Nishant Kumar Disclaimer: This story is for educational purposes only. The views and recommendations expressed are those of the expert, not Mint. We advise investors to consult with certified experts before making any investment decisions, as market conditions can change rapidly and circumstances may vary.

ETMarkets Smart Talk: Have Rs 10 lakh to invest in 2H2025? Anil Rego recommends 65:25:10 asset allocation mix
ETMarkets Smart Talk: Have Rs 10 lakh to invest in 2H2025? Anil Rego recommends 65:25:10 asset allocation mix

Economic Times

time27-06-2025

  • Business
  • Economic Times

ETMarkets Smart Talk: Have Rs 10 lakh to invest in 2H2025? Anil Rego recommends 65:25:10 asset allocation mix

Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel As global markets navigate geopolitical tensions , shifting interest rate cycles, and lingering inflation concerns, investors are seeking clarity on how to position their portfolios for the second half of this edition of ETMarkets Smart Talk, we spoke with Anil Rego , Managing Director and Chief Investment Officer at Right Horizons PMS, to decode the road India continuing to stand out amid global uncertainty — thanks to strong GDP growth , cooling inflation, and policy continuity — Rego believes now is an opportune time to gradually deploy fresh long-term investors with a Rs 10 lakh corpus, he suggests a balanced 65:25:10 allocation across equities, debt, and gold, tailored for a risk-averse this exclusive conversation, Rego shares his insights on market outlook, sector opportunities, interest rate dynamics, and the right strategy to navigate the evolving macro landscape in 2H2025. Edited Excerpts –A) Volatility in June after can be largely attributed to geopolitical concerns and global macro uncertainties, among other ongoing Israel-Gaza and Israel-Hezbollah escalations have rekindled fears of a broader conflict, which can disrupt oil supply routes and global trade Fed's cautious stance on rate cuts has firmed up the dollar and pressured EM flows. While the world faces geopolitical tensions, slow economic growth, high inflation, and elevated interest rates, India tells a different nation is witnessing solid GDP growth, a steady currency, easing inflation and interest rates, and strong corporate may persist in the near term due to global cues, but structural domestic drivers (capex push, consumption revival, earnings growth) remain nominal GDP expanded by 10.8% yoy in Q4 FY25, the fastest pace in the last four quarters, leading to an overall growth of 9.8% for the full fiscal strong performance underscores improving domestic macroeconomic conditions, which are expected to persist and continue supporting corporate earnings.A) The outlook appears cautiously optimistic. On the macro front, India continues to stand out with stable GDP growth around 6.5%, well-contained inflation, and policy continuity RBI has front-loaded 100 bps of rate cuts this year, which should begin transmitting into lower borrowing costs and potentially support consumption and private capex in the coming cues will play a major role. If the U.S. Fed were to initiate rate cuts by Q4CY25, it would improve global risk appetite and support foreign inflows into emerging markets like geopolitical flashpoints particularly in the Middle East remain key downside risks, especially if crude oil spikes above $90/bbl and disrupts supply corporate earnings, sectors like financials, autos, industrials, and consumer discretionary are likely to drive the next leg of growth, while IT and export-oriented businesses may remain range-bound amid global 2H2025 is expected to see stable economic momentum, gradual recovery in consumption, and greater market depth supported by both domestic and foreign investors.A) Crude oil prices have remained relatively low over the past year due to uncertain demand and sufficient supply, which have outweighed the ongoing effects of the Russia-Ukraine recent Israeli airstrikes on Iran and Iran's retaliatory actions have reignited concerns, pushing prices upward once these events pushed Brent crude briefly above $75/bbl, prices remain below the FY22–25 average, suggesting that global supply is still largely crude movement will likely be shaped by how the conflict evolves if oil infrastructure or shipping lanes are directly hit, Brent could spike a macro perspective, moderate crude prices are a net positive for India. Every $10/bbl rise in crude can shave 30–40 bps off GDP growth and widen the current account corporate earnings, for upstream companies, higher prices could support earnings. OMCs could face margin pressure if retail prices remain unchanged, while inventory gains may offer temporary companies may see a negative impact due to rising LNG prices linked to crude. If prices remain range-bound, the impact on India's FY26 GDP and earnings would be manageable.A) The corporate profit-to-GDP ratio for Nifty 500 held steady year-on-year at a 17-year high of 4.7% in FY25, largely supported by a strong 10.5% growth in corporate profits which was reinforced by a solid 9.8% rise in GDP during the same strong performance in GDP growth in Q4 underscores improving domestic macroeconomic conditions, which is expected to persist and continue supporting corporate corporate earnings are projected to outpace GDP growth. We remain optimistic on sectors with strong structural tailwinds, where policy support, demand visibility, and earnings momentum align to create compelling long-term Capital Goods and Industrial sectors are riding a structural upcycle, supported by the government's infrastructure push and private capex revival. The electrical equipment market is projected to more than double by 2027, while the construction equipment segment is poised to grow at a 15% CAGR. This growth is backed by strong order books, execution tailwinds, and continued momentum in railways, power, and defense. Valuations, particularly in mid-cap names, remain attractive relative to growth prospects. With operating leverage kicking in and policy continuity post-elections, this sector offers a strong combination of earnings visibility and valuation comfort, making it a core long-term consumer discretionary sector continues to benefit from robust urban demand, premiumization, and formalization. Despite rural softness and inflationary pressures, segments like value fashion, QSRs, and jewellery are witnessing strong traction. With consumer spending projected to reach USD 4.3 trillion by 2030, India's aspirational consumption story is intact. Easy credit, digital access, and expanding middle-class income underpin this trend. While valuations for large caps have rerated, opportunities exist in niche mid-cap players with strong brand equity and efficient cost structures. The sector remains structurally sound, but stock selection is key amid divergent growth trajectories across wealth management sector in India is undergoing a significant transformation, driven by a sharp rise in HNI and UHNI wealth. With financial assets projected to grow from USD 1.2 trillion in 2023 to USD 2.2 trillion by 2028, and only 15% of this wealth professionally managed, the runway for growth is immense. Regulatory changes like the revised income tax slabs also support financial product adoption. The sector offers structural tailwinds, though valuations vary. Companies with scalable digital platforms, high-retention advisory models, and diversified product suites stand to benefit the most. This is a long-term theme with potential for strong compounding.A) FIIs are turning constructive on India amid falling global interest rates. As central banks like the move toward easing, India stands out with its stable macroeconomic environment and robust GDP growth. The RBI's front-loaded rate cuts and improved liquidity conditions have further strengthened the investment to other emerging markets, India offers a compelling combination of policy continuity, structural reform momentum, and resilient corporate earnings. FIIs also value India's demographic strength and rising digital and consumption-driven global bond yields softening and risk appetite improving, India is regaining favour as a long-term allocation. While geopolitical risks remain a watch point, India's relative insulation, stable currency, and strong domestic flows provide FIIs a dependable and scalable growth story in the current global macro cycle.A) It is a favorable opportunity to gradually deploy fresh capital, especially given the evolving macro environment and supportive policy RBI's front-loaded rate cuts, a benign inflation outlook, and the prospect of stable real interest rates indicate a shift toward a growth-supportive as the global monetary cycle begins easing and domestic capex and consumption cycles gain traction, long-term investors can find attractive entry points across asset classes.A staggered deployment is recommended with asset Allocation assuming a risk averse client with exposure towards Equity/Debt/Gold at 65%/25%/10% respectively.A) The RBI's rate trajectory has taken a decisive turn with a surprise front-loaded 50 bps repo rate cut in June 2025, bringing the policy rate down to 5.5%. This move followed two earlier 25 bps cuts since February, marking a cumulative easing of 100 bps in a short RBI also announced a 100-bps cut in the CRR to 3%, aimed at injecting ₹2.5 trillion of liquidity into the banking system by December the 50-bps front-loaded cut is a strong and timely policy signal, its impact on consumption, especially private and rural demand, may be limited in the short lending rates and improved liquidity could support credit flow, ease borrowing costs, and boost urban discretionary segments like housing and also strengthens monetary transmission and may lift business sentiment, aiding capex recovery. A rate cut only helps in stimulating demand to drive a broad-based consumption rebound.(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)

ETMarkets Smart Talk: Have Rs 10 lakh to invest in 2H2025? Anil Rego recommends 65:25:10 asset allocation mix
ETMarkets Smart Talk: Have Rs 10 lakh to invest in 2H2025? Anil Rego recommends 65:25:10 asset allocation mix

Time of India

time27-06-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

ETMarkets Smart Talk: Have Rs 10 lakh to invest in 2H2025? Anil Rego recommends 65:25:10 asset allocation mix

As global markets navigate geopolitical tensions , shifting interest rate cycles, and lingering inflation concerns, investors are seeking clarity on how to position their portfolios for the second half of 2025. In this edition of ETMarkets Smart Talk, we spoke with Anil Rego , Managing Director and Chief Investment Officer at Right Horizons PMS, to decode the road ahead. With India continuing to stand out amid global uncertainty — thanks to strong GDP growth , cooling inflation, and policy continuity — Rego believes now is an opportune time to gradually deploy fresh capital. For long-term investors with a Rs 10 lakh corpus, he suggests a balanced 65:25:10 allocation across equities, debt, and gold, tailored for a risk-averse profile. In this exclusive conversation, Rego shares his insights on market outlook, sector opportunities, interest rate dynamics, and the right strategy to navigate the evolving macro landscape in 2H2025. Edited Excerpts – Q) We closed May on a high note but witnessed some volatility in June – is it geopolitical concerns weighing on sentiment? A) Volatility in June after can be largely attributed to geopolitical concerns and global macro uncertainties, among other factors. The ongoing Israel-Gaza and Israel-Hezbollah escalations have rekindled fears of a broader conflict, which can disrupt oil supply routes and global trade flows. The Fed's cautious stance on rate cuts has firmed up the dollar and pressured EM flows. While the world faces geopolitical tensions, slow economic growth, high inflation, and elevated interest rates, India tells a different story. The nation is witnessing solid GDP growth, a steady currency, easing inflation and interest rates, and strong corporate earnings. Live Events Volatility may persist in the near term due to global cues, but structural domestic drivers (capex push, consumption revival, earnings growth) remain intact. India's nominal GDP expanded by 10.8% yoy in Q4 FY25, the fastest pace in the last four quarters, leading to an overall growth of 9.8% for the full fiscal year. This strong performance underscores improving domestic macroeconomic conditions, which are expected to persist and continue supporting corporate earnings. Q) As we are about to end 1H2025, what are your expectations or assumptions for the rest of the year? A) The outlook appears cautiously optimistic. On the macro front, India continues to stand out with stable GDP growth around 6.5%, well-contained inflation, and policy continuity post-elections. The RBI has front-loaded 100 bps of rate cuts this year, which should begin transmitting into lower borrowing costs and potentially support consumption and private capex in the coming months. Global cues will play a major role. If the U.S. Fed were to initiate rate cuts by Q4CY25, it would improve global risk appetite and support foreign inflows into emerging markets like India. However, geopolitical flashpoints particularly in the Middle East remain key downside risks, especially if crude oil spikes above $90/bbl and disrupts supply chains. On corporate earnings, sectors like financials, autos, industrials, and consumer discretionary are likely to drive the next leg of growth, while IT and export-oriented businesses may remain range-bound amid global uncertainty. Overall, 2H2025 is expected to see stable economic momentum, gradual recovery in consumption, and greater market depth supported by both domestic and foreign investors. Q) Geopolitical concerns weighed on crude oil in the past few weeks. How do you see crude oil moving in the near future and what could be the possible impact on earnings and GDP growth? A) Crude oil prices have remained relatively low over the past year due to uncertain demand and sufficient supply, which have outweighed the ongoing effects of the Russia-Ukraine war. However, recent Israeli airstrikes on Iran and Iran's retaliatory actions have reignited concerns, pushing prices upward once again. While these events pushed Brent crude briefly above $75/bbl, prices remain below the FY22–25 average, suggesting that global supply is still largely intact. Near-term crude movement will likely be shaped by how the conflict evolves if oil infrastructure or shipping lanes are directly hit, Brent could spike significantly. From a macro perspective, moderate crude prices are a net positive for India. Every $10/bbl rise in crude can shave 30–40 bps off GDP growth and widen the current account deficit. On corporate earnings, for upstream companies, higher prices could support earnings. OMCs could face margin pressure if retail prices remain unchanged, while inventory gains may offer temporary relief. Gas companies may see a negative impact due to rising LNG prices linked to crude. If prices remain range-bound, the impact on India's FY26 GDP and earnings would be manageable. Q) In terms of valuation comfort – which sectors are on your radar? A) The corporate profit-to-GDP ratio for Nifty 500 held steady year-on-year at a 17-year high of 4.7% in FY25, largely supported by a strong 10.5% growth in corporate profits which was reinforced by a solid 9.8% rise in GDP during the same period. The strong performance in GDP growth in Q4 underscores improving domestic macroeconomic conditions, which is expected to persist and continue supporting corporate earnings. Further corporate earnings are projected to outpace GDP growth. We remain optimistic on sectors with strong structural tailwinds, where policy support, demand visibility, and earnings momentum align to create compelling long-term opportunities. Capital Goods & Industrials India's Capital Goods and Industrial sectors are riding a structural upcycle, supported by the government's infrastructure push and private capex revival. The electrical equipment market is projected to more than double by 2027, while the construction equipment segment is poised to grow at a 15% CAGR. This growth is backed by strong order books, execution tailwinds, and continued momentum in railways, power, and defense. Valuations, particularly in mid-cap names, remain attractive relative to growth prospects. With operating leverage kicking in and policy continuity post-elections, this sector offers a strong combination of earnings visibility and valuation comfort, making it a core long-term theme. Consumer Discretionary India's consumer discretionary sector continues to benefit from robust urban demand, premiumization, and formalization. Despite rural softness and inflationary pressures, segments like value fashion, QSRs, and jewellery are witnessing strong traction. With consumer spending projected to reach USD 4.3 trillion by 2030, India's aspirational consumption story is intact. Easy credit, digital access, and expanding middle-class income underpin this trend. While valuations for large caps have rerated, opportunities exist in niche mid-cap players with strong brand equity and efficient cost structures. The sector remains structurally sound, but stock selection is key amid divergent growth trajectories across sub-segments. Wealth Management The wealth management sector in India is undergoing a significant transformation, driven by a sharp rise in HNI and UHNI wealth. With financial assets projected to grow from USD 1.2 trillion in 2023 to USD 2.2 trillion by 2028, and only 15% of this wealth professionally managed, the runway for growth is immense. Regulatory changes like the revised income tax slabs also support financial product adoption. The sector offers structural tailwinds, though valuations vary. Companies with scalable digital platforms, high-retention advisory models, and diversified product suites stand to benefit the most. This is a long-term theme with potential for strong compounding. Q) How are FIIs looking at India amid falling interest rates globally? A) FIIs are turning constructive on India amid falling global interest rates. As central banks like the move toward easing, India stands out with its stable macroeconomic environment and robust GDP growth. The RBI's front-loaded rate cuts and improved liquidity conditions have further strengthened the investment case. Compared to other emerging markets, India offers a compelling combination of policy continuity, structural reform momentum, and resilient corporate earnings. FIIs also value India's demographic strength and rising digital and consumption-driven economy. With global bond yields softening and risk appetite improving, India is regaining favour as a long-term allocation. While geopolitical risks remain a watch point, India's relative insulation, stable currency, and strong domestic flows provide FIIs a dependable and scalable growth story in the current global macro cycle. Q) If someone plans to allocate say Rs 10 lakh (30-40 years) in 2H2025 – should they put fresh money to work? What is the ideal asset allocation? A) It is a favorable opportunity to gradually deploy fresh capital, especially given the evolving macro environment and supportive policy signals. The RBI's front-loaded rate cuts, a benign inflation outlook, and the prospect of stable real interest rates indicate a shift toward a growth-supportive stance. Moreover, as the global monetary cycle begins easing and domestic capex and consumption cycles gain traction, long-term investors can find attractive entry points across asset classes. A staggered deployment is recommended with asset Allocation assuming a risk averse client with exposure towards Equity/Debt/Gold at 65%/25%/10% respectively. Q) How is the rate trajectory looking from the RBI? Do you think the front-loaded 50 bps cut was enough to boost consumption? A) The RBI's rate trajectory has taken a decisive turn with a surprise front-loaded 50 bps repo rate cut in June 2025, bringing the policy rate down to 5.5%. This move followed two earlier 25 bps cuts since February, marking a cumulative easing of 100 bps in a short span. The RBI also announced a 100-bps cut in the CRR to 3%, aimed at injecting ₹2.5 trillion of liquidity into the banking system by December 2025. While the 50-bps front-loaded cut is a strong and timely policy signal, its impact on consumption, especially private and rural demand, may be limited in the short run. Lower lending rates and improved liquidity could support credit flow, ease borrowing costs, and boost urban discretionary segments like housing and auto. It also strengthens monetary transmission and may lift business sentiment, aiding capex recovery. A rate cut only helps in stimulating demand to drive a broad-based consumption rebound.

Trade talks fuel market rally: Time to rework your strategy?
Trade talks fuel market rally: Time to rework your strategy?

Mint

time11-06-2025

  • Business
  • Mint

Trade talks fuel market rally: Time to rework your strategy?

Indian stock markets surged on June 11 as hopes of a near-term trade agreement between India and the United States lifted investor sentiment. Ongoing bilateral talks in New Delhi between trade officials from both nations focused on enhancing market access, easing digital trade restrictions, and reducing customs barriers. With the July 9 tariff deadline looming, policymakers expressed confidence that a deal could be finalized soon—fueling a rally in the benchmark indices and prompting market experts to share their strategic investment advice. Over the past week, US and Indian officials engaged in extensive dialogue aimed at resolving long-standing trade disputes and improving bilateral commerce. The discussions, which remain confidential, were described as productive by an Indian government official. India's Foreign Minister noted that the country was "hopeful" of sealing an agreement before the current 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs expires on July 9. Sensex surged 391 points to reach an intraday high of 82,783.51, while Nifty rose 118 points to 25,222.40, reflecting investor optimism. A potential breakthrough in trade relations, particularly with the US—formerly India's largest trading partner—could significantly improve the export landscape and ease tariff-related concerns. Despite a persistent trade deficit of $45 billion, both sides aim to push bilateral trade to $500 billion, although India is cautious about concessions in sensitive sectors like agriculture. Saurav Ghosh, Co-founder of Jiraaf, believes the market may remain volatile until the deal is finalized, but any resolution would be a net positive. 'A successful agreement—even with India taking a more flexible stance—could boost consumer sentiment, increase corporate capex, and attract new investments. For long-term investors, this reinforces the importance of staying invested in equities and mutual funds through a buy-and-hold strategy,' he said. Ghosh also advised cautious sectoral allocation, especially into beneficiaries of a trade-driven rally, while using fixed-income instruments to manage volatility. Anil Rego, Founder and Fund Manager at Right Horizons PMS, said the deal could unlock new opportunities for exporters, particularly in digital services and high-value manufacturing. 'Investors are hopeful about an interim pact by June. If achieved, this could reduce trade friction and strengthen economic ties. Combined with the RBI's recent policy support, including a 100bps rate cut and ₹ 2.5 trillion liquidity injection, this sets a favourable backdrop for Indian equities,' Rego said. According to Mayank Jain, Market Analyst at export-oriented sectors stand to benefit the most if trade flows improve. 'Pharma, specialty chemicals, and IT players such as Dr. Reddy's, Divi's Labs, and Infosys could see earnings upgrades,' he said. However, he cautioned that agriculture and segments of the auto industry may face pressure due to potential tariff reductions for US imports. Jain also flagged uncertainties stemming from recent US tariff hikes on Indian steel and aluminum and the 26 percent reciprocal tariffs temporarily suspended until July 9. Disclaimer: The views and recommendations made above are those of individual analysts or broking companies, and not of Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.

Sensex jumps 700 points: Why RBI's bumper rate cut has Dalal Street buzzing
Sensex jumps 700 points: Why RBI's bumper rate cut has Dalal Street buzzing

India Today

time06-06-2025

  • Business
  • India Today

Sensex jumps 700 points: Why RBI's bumper rate cut has Dalal Street buzzing

Dalal Street's main indices soared after the Reserve Bank of India's bumper rate cut on Friday, with the BSE Sensex and NSE Nifty50 erasing early losses to jump nearly 1% each. The S&P BSE Sensex was up by 731.61 points to 82,173.65, while the NSE Nifty rallied by 236.30 points to 24,987.20 as of 11:21 central bank also shifted its policy stance from accommodative to neutral. The RBI maintained its real GDP growth projections for FY26, expecting 6.5% in Q1, 6.7% in Q2, 6.6% in Q3, and 6.3% in Rego, Founder and Fund Manager at Right Horizons PMS, said the RBI's decision marks a turning point in India's monetary policy. 'The Monetary Policy Committee delivered a front-loaded 50 basis point repo rate cut, bringing it down to 5.5%,' he said. 'This shows a shift towards a more balanced and data-based approach, especially in a time of global uncertainties and changing capital flows.'He also noted that liquidity in India remains in surplus, and banks have already started lowering deposit rates. 'Savings account rates have come down to 2.70%, and fixed deposit rates have dropped by 30 to 70 basis points since February,' Rego said. He added that the RBI's 100 basis point cut since February highlights the urgency to support Sharma, Founder and Fund Manager at Green Portfolio PMS, said the rate cut will increase liquidity and lower borrowing costs. 'This move makes it cheaper for companies to borrow and invest, which is good for long-term growth. With global trade tensions rising, this extra liquidity is a well-timed move,' he also welcomed the RBI's decision to cut the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) by 100 basis points. 'This will free up more money for banks to lend. With foreign investor inflows slowing down, this step brings much-needed funds into the system,' Sharma stocks were among the top gainers after the news. Many rose more than 1%. Experts say banks and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) will benefit the most from lower funding (Disclaimer: The views, opinions, recommendations, and suggestions expressed by experts/brokerages in this article are their own and do not reflect the views of the India Today Group. It is advisable to consult a qualified broker or financial advisor before making any actual investment or trading choices.)Narinder Wadhwa, Managing Director and CEO of SKI Capital Services Ltd., said, 'Lower interest rates will boost credit demand. Stocks like HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Bajaj Finance, and SBI may do well.'He added that lower loan rates could help the real estate and housing finance sector too. 'With cheaper home loans, developers like DLF and lenders such as HDFC Ltd and LIC Housing Finance may see more demand.'He also pointed out that the auto sector could gain from the rate cut. 'Lower vehicle loan rates should support sales for Maruti Suzuki, M&M, and Hero MotoCorp.'Wadhwa added that consumer-focused companies may also benefit. 'Retail and consumer goods firms like Titan, Trent, and Jubilant FoodWorks may see higher demand as lower EMIs leave people with more money to spend.'The rate cut may also help sectors such as capital goods and infrastructure. 'If borrowing costs go down and companies start new projects, firms like L&T and Siemens may benefit,' he sectors like IT and pharma might see limited gains. A weaker rupee could help their margins, but global trade problems may hit demand. On the other hand, sectors that depend on imports—like oil & gas and metals—might face pressure if the rupee continues to consumer goods (FMCG) companies may not do as well in the short term. 'As investors turn to growth-focused sectors, FMCG stocks could underperform,' Wadhwa said. However, he added that the overall market mood has improved.(Disclaimer: The views, opinions, recommendations, and suggestions expressed by experts/brokerages in this article are their own and do not reflect the views of the India Today Group. It is advisable to consult a qualified broker or financial advisor before making any actual investment or trading choices.)Must Watch

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